IF you have the capital to do so.
Even if you don't, it society is much more accessible today. Look at how dramatically the cost of food has fallen as a prime example. Not that long ago, food took up around half a typical family's budget. Now, more like 10-15%.
In the 1920s, a bushel of wheat was worth around $1 USD; or $15 USD today. Today's price is $6 USD for a bushel of wheat. That's a decline of $9 per bushel in real dollars over the past 100 years. And wheat is inflated right now due to the conflict in the Ukraine. Should that come to an end any time soon, that $9 will grow even larger.
That stark cost reduction enables things – like being able to subscribe to telephone and Internet service, which opens whole new doors to engage with society. Nearly everyone has phone and/or internet service today. That historic farmer most certainly didn't. They had church on Sunday. That's about it.
Today, if you live your life with nothing but church on Sunday, you really can laze around for most of the rest of your time. But, indeed, almost nobody is content with having nothing but church on Sunday anymore. For a lot of people today, church isn't even considered an activity worthy of their time because our standards for what makes for a good social activity have been able to rise so much higher.
Huh? The trickle down line comes from comedian Will Rogers who was making a joke about how President Hoover, who was an engineer, was accustomed to water trickling down, but that he didn't realize money trickles up.
It was a line to serve the exact opposite – to tell the 'proles' that the economic plan was fundamentally flawed.