Wednesday, January 18, 2012

How radical a minimalist do you want to be?

Becoming a minimalist is one of those things in life that can have many forms, and each person can decide just how far they want to take it. For instance, there are some minimalists that have made the decision to minimize not only objects in their homes, but their homes as well.

One example of this is Nina Yau...

Nina blogs at Castles in the Air. Just a short time ago, Nina was in a corporate job in Chicago, then she set out on a path to minimize the things in her life and to also seek truth. Now, she lives with only what she can carry, has lived in multiple countries, and has just completed yoga instructor training in Bangalore, India. Nina has certainly minimized.

Another dedicated minimalist is Colin Wright, his website is called Exile Lifestyle. Colin went beyond the popular minimalist trend of getting your possessions down to 100 items, and now has only 51 things he owns. To make his life even more challenging and adventurous, Colin moves to a new country every four months based on the votes of his online readers.

But a minimalist does not have to be as extreme as Nina and Colin are, although I must say that I admire both of them. You can simply have the goal of getting the clutter and excess stuff out of your life. As Peter Walsh, a well-known organizer has aptly said, "It's all too much!"

Truer words have never been spoken. In modern society it is easy to acquire things, and many of us have been brought up with an acquisition mindset but not a letting go mindset. In other words, we keep getting things but find it difficult to let go of things and pass them on.

Leo Babauta explains this as being a scarcity mentality versus an abundance mentality. He applies this idea of abundance not only to minimization but to copyrighting his work online.


If you come from an abundance mindset, then letting things go becomes easier because you know you can create and obtain more wonderful things when and if you need them. Conversely, if you come from a scarcity mindset, you tend to hang onto things for the rainy day that might come.

Those of us who grew up with parents or grandparents that lived through the rough times of the Great Depression or a previous war, likely had the rainy-day-just-in-case mentality either subtly or overtly drummed into our consciousness. While that is understandable, it does make it a challenge when you make the conscious choice to minimize. However, it can be done.

I suppose the bottom line is that each of us that wants to become a minimalist has to try and understand where they are starting from and where they want to ultimately end up. It will not be the same for everyone. My minimal lifestyle will not look the same as Nina's, Colin's, Leo's nor anyone else's, but the key is that it is the life that I want and is perfectly suited to me.

The fact that it is a life of my design is what matters most. What will your minimal life look like?

3 comments:

  1. I thoughtful post honey. As you know, I'm definitely a product of my rainy-day-may-come mated with all-objects-have-emotional-attachments upbringing. It's really the path to hoarding, if not careful. I hope to break down some of those patterns of thought so that it's not accompanied by the overwhelming feeling of "it's all too much!"

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  3. Focusing on the vision of what you want your life to be like before beginning anything is key.

    Then ask the question: Is what I am doing contributing to making my vision a reality? Is buying this or keeping this contributing to my vision?

    If it is not, don't do it, buy it, or keep it. ; )

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