What does "gold is where you find it" mean?

Gold is where you find it.

Can someone please give me an example of how to use this expression?


The meaning of the phrase is that value is determined by each person individually. An expression used in a similar fashion is, 'beauty is in the eye of the beholder.' These expressions are similar in how they establish a connection between the item or condition of value, and the seeker.

An example of usage: Discussion between two job seekers

A: I heard about a job opening as an accountant in a small factory.

B: A job like that doesn't interest me, but gold is where you find it.

A: It might be a little boring, but I think I could get a lot of work experience there.

  • The meaning of this exchange would therefore be, that B does not want the accountant's job, but understands that it might interest someone else, especially A. A agrees that there are problems with the job, and explains what her interest in it is.

An important element in the usage of the phrase is that others do not see, or have not found value where the seeker does.


Examples from actual usage:

  • Actual Usage in Pop Culture (70's TV)

A reference from a hit TV series, can be found in an episode of Grizzly Adams. The meaning there is related to a discovery of benefit or value in an unexpected or overlooked place. The episode, called, “Gold is where you find it,” is related in this synopsis:

Four orphaned wolf pups....a man facing a lonely future...and the act of kindness that saved them all. It is a story that will touch your heart. Retired attorney Jim Crawford (Michael Flynn) has just lost his wife to cancer, tearing his family apart and leaving him utterly alone. While still lost in the depths of despair, help comes in an unexpected way. Jim discovers four orphaned wolf pups that need a friend just to survive. In spite of his own misery, he takes them in and learns to care for them. Unlikely friends have found each other, and discovered hope in an unlikely way. Soon it is time for the matured wolves to live on their own, and Jim returns them to the forest. Jim's legal help to the local townspeople becomes a barrier to Beddows (David Nibley), the unscrupulous developer who is trying to take over the town. Scheming Beddows plans to get Jim out of the way by putting his wolves in danger. While searching the forest to protect the wolves from Beddows, Jim is attacked by a grizzly bear. Without warning, the four wolves come to Jim's aid and fend off the angry bear. Jim realizes they have always been there...watching out for him...and the four wolves repaid their friend for his kindness.

  • Actual usage from sources interested in finding actual gold

http://www.acjohnson.us/explorationdevelopment/goldrecovery.html

http://www.teara.govt.nz/en/gold-and-gold-mining/2

http://www.goldprospectors.org/newforum/forum_posts.asp?TID=18663&title=gold-is-where-you-find-it

http://www.republicofmining.com/2008/08/19/ontario-gold-is-where-you-find-it-%E2%80%93-by-michael-barnes/

http://www.csiro.au/people/Frank.Reith.html

Each usage essentially treats the phrase as an axiom, and uses it to refer to hidden value being uncovered by specific observers choosing to look, or chance discovery in unexpected circumstances.


This is something related to Optimism. Consider you had this Dairy at your Farm and you sell the milk everyday. But suddenly from one odd day onward you find all your milk production gets Curdled due to some changes in the surrounding and the Dairy conditions. This certainly is gonna haunt you because its effecting your earning. You don't have any other option to earn your livelihood. So one day you get an idea to process this curdled milk and get some dairy products like Cottage Cheese , Curd , etc. and you again start earning more than what you earned from Milk Business. So finally you have found a GOLD