We make a big deal about what we spend our money on. In the end, the way we spend our money is just a minute detail in the grand scheme of how we spend our life. Don’t get drug down in the details unnecessarily — especially if it doesn’t help you grow in your personal finance journey.You don’t have to have an impressive spreadsheet, an aggressive budget, or even a detailed plan to spend your money well, get the bills paid, and buy what you want.As a college student and a nerdy one at that, I’m always on the hunt for the next big tech steal, whether it be on Amazon or FaceBook marketplace. Recently I was contemplating buying an iPad Pro, an Apple Watch, and a monitor to split my laptop screen onto.All in all, this would cost about $1,000, if not more. While all of these are reasonable purchases that would greatly enhance my life as a gadget junky, student, and business owner/writer/researcher, there was a voice in the back of my head telling me not to.“I have enough money to last me the rest of my life, unless I buy something.”― Jackie MasonWhile I love my mother very much, her voice is also the one that would follow me into any store as a kid (literally, not metaphorically) and tell me not to ask for too much. While as a kid this made sense, given I literally didn’t have space in my bedroom to contain all of the LEGOs and American Girl Dolls I wanted to own, I no longer need this voice telling me to spend less.I’m now an adult who can make reasonable and satisfying choices about what to spend my money on. And if I have the money, the means, and the muster to…