I started minimalism by changing habits. I changed my job, my schedule, my shopping habits & limiting what was coming into my home. Then I started decluttering areas one at a time. I started with my closet because that was easy for me. I then did the rest of my bedroom. Then moved outward to other rooms. I have vigilantly protected the spaces once complete to make sure they stay decluttered & organized. I also did a no-buy 2019, a low-buy 2020 and am doing a no-buy 2021. I find this helps me really focus on how I am living, what I am enjoying and what I want more/less of in my life. Now when a space feels "wrong" to me, I tidy it and take a picture. I then look at the picture to identify what it is about the space that bothers me. It gives me a degree of seperation from the items.
Minimalism isn't about throwing out your stuff. It's about realizing most of the stuff advertised to you is for stuff you don't need. Only get what you really need, and don't buy things you don't. Buy quality that will last a long time. I have had one sofa etc for 30 yrs and it will last probably 20-30 more.
Great comment, and I couldn't agree more. I refuse to buy any more crap I don't need. I'm in the process of decluttering now, and it is such a great feeling to get rid of "stuff."
I seriously need to.bear this in mind. I'm a extreme declutterer but also I have a bit of a buying addiction it doesnt matter if Its 10p but I must buy things. I dont use credit cards or anything so it's well.within my means. Thankgod I've just began selling on ebay. I also buy second hand on ebay now or upcycled if I need furniture. I'm.also someone that suffers from fairly extreme mood changes and style changes. I switch over night it's so difficult haa.
I started down the path of minimalism before I even knew there was an actual name for it. My husband and I lost both of our parents close together and we had the unenviable task of cleaning out 2 packed houses along with assorted storage sheds and work shops. It took months and was just so overwhelming on top of the grief. One day we came home with boxes and boxes of our parents “stuff” and it hit me that I was going to leave my children in the same situation if I didn’t change drastically. We started giving away to family, friends and charities. I have some sentimental things that I just can’t part with but my children will not have to deal with a mess when I’m gone.
I've been through the same situation except instead of bringing stuff home, when we got home, my husband and I went through and got rid of a bunch of stuff. We cleaned out our house. Our kids weren't too happy with us. We had gotten rid of a bunch of their toys and now that they are grown, they still remind us. 😊 But when you go through the trauma of losing those close to you and then having to go through their piles, it changes your mindset. That was many years ago, and I'm still not a minimalist, but I do keep the question in mind of what am I leaving my family to have to deal with?
I have this problem to look forward to. I love my mom more than anything and she deserves to have whatever she wants. However she has a lot of stuff. She has sentimental items from at least 3 generations on her side of my family alone. For example, she can't bear to part with the dishes that were used when she was growing up, but she doesn't use them now. Also, she collects anything that she thinks she will use. I recently started my own minimalism journey and have tried talking to her about it, but it doesn't seem to be working. 😕
@@kimhr1069 No. It probably won't work. Not only does it most likely seem a huge task, she likes her stuff and thinks she will miss it. She also probably doesn't want to see it go to just anybody, but wants to keep it in the family. When we cleaned out my dad's house, my siblings came home for the funeral. First, we decided on which items should be sold either at auction or privately - the house at auction, a valuable collection privately - and then I got each of us a different color of masking tape and starting with the oldest we took turns putting tape on anything we wanted. If someone was done before everyone else and didn't want more, that was fine; if someone wanted to keep going and take more, that was fine too. Everything that was left we sold at the auction with the house. If someone wants to take on the task of selling individual items separately, they will bring more money, but for us, we just wanted to be done, so we chose an auction. I hope you have a long time left with your mom, and when the time does come, I hope this helps.
@@jumbalayaismisspeells3363 Thank you for the great information and sweet thoughts. I hope I have a very long time with my mom, too, before I ever have to use your incredibly well thought out and organized ideas.
When my dad died, mom bought a storage shed for all his stuff. When my mom died, each sibling took what they wanted, we took 5 trips to the dump, we held 3 separate estate sales, the veterans thrift store took 7 truck and trailer loads, and I still brought home enough stuff to fill a 38' box trailer!!! This is something I do not want to pass onto my kid. But here it is, 12 years later, & I'm still going through the stuff.
I love this. Since we started decluttering more (I definitely can't claim to be a minimalist yet) we have truly come to appreciate our home. Before, I was always thinking "I need more storage" or "I want to renovate" but now I just love it how it is! Gratitude is always the best attitude
Me and my husband had to start minimalism. There was one time he was like I DONT HAVE SHIRTS TO WEAR! I counted all his shirts that night and counted 74 shirts and 8 pants. I told him afterwards, he was very disappointed with himself. We started to sort out his clothes, sold some and then donated most. Now he has 15 shirts and is very happy with it. He gets to wear all of them in 2 weeks (just in time for laundry) and we have so much closet space! IT is the way to go
It's like kids with too many toys. Too many toys causes the child to be UNABLE to settle down with one or two toys and play more deeply. If the child has five favorite sets of toys, say, Legos, matchbox cars, Lincoln logs, small doll house and little toy animals, he can be quite content for days on end. Add 20 computer games, six more Lego sets, 12 jigsaw puzzles and 25 board games and you have children who can't pick from all those choices, and when they finally DO pick they play a little bit, then are distracted by another toy and soon there are toy sets strewn all over the floor. Ask your child which five toys are his favorites and then slowly whittle down the ones he just never plays with. Instead of making this feel punitive, as if you are punishing them by taking away toys, look at it like a good deed, giving away the toys he doesn't really care about to kids who have nothing by donating to Goodwill or a second hand shop or church garage sale. Introduce the idea of sharing and charitable choices early in their lives. Most American kids have WAY too many toys, especially stuffed animals which just gather dust, leading to dust mite allergies. If a child has a lovey animal and two others that is sufficient. Launder all the other ones that have never been played with and donate them to a battered women's shelter. Hospitals also sometimes use them for kids who come into the ER with no lovey.
I am sad to read about the disappointment. That should never be the goal. But, yes, when you can't see the few items you enjoy or love amongst the clutter, it's depressing. Clarifying what you really love, you get a better sense of identity and self, too. Because you get clear on what you need and what you don't, what serves you and what doesn't.
Agreed! I'm legally blind and have been trying to declutter and downsize for a few years. Clear pathways, less stuff and a home for everything makes life simpler and safer and helps me stay independent. I still love art, home decor and cozy rooms, but find I can have all that on a smaller scale with just as much pleasure and meaning.
@@jennifermuchow2728 - The habit of creating clear pathways through your home, to your windows, around your furniture… It not only creates a safer home, but it creates a Home that feels more spacious and is easier to clean. And I think it is a lot easier to say no to shopping by beginning with This end in mind: safe, spacious, easy to clean.
I am somewhat limited mobility wise too. With less clutter, fewer items on display, you can clean SO much faster and you don't fall over, trip on, spill, knock over, or otherwise have "fights" with all your stuff. I also like the way more minimalism feels. Also minimalism is a philosophy and one is never "finished with" your stuff, nor do you finally "arrive at" a minimalist home. It is ongoing, so it is a habit and practice. If you bring one new shirt home, you let another go to donate or trash. That way you are never again going to be cluttering. But now and then an area overtakes you, so you clean out that closet shelf or that drawer or that shoe rack.
There are so many youtubers that are constantly clearing out their closets for the sake of "minimalism" but then the next video will be a shopping haul
Biggest tip from me🌿: Put everything you don't use daily/weekly in a box, hide it from yourself and take the things you miss from the box and find places for them. The rest are usually meaningless or can be reused, remade, donated or recycled.
Linnea Mai - I know someone in the vintage resale business and sometimes she picks through massive piles of clothing at a warehouse to find those special things hidden in the mess. I’ve never been one to go shopping for clothes just to go shopping for clothes. I have more than I need you to body size change, but I have also donated a lot especially after hurricanes and floods. But now I realize that those leftover clothing pieces doubt always find a Home if no one wants to buy them. I do some sewing so… I will be ramping up my skills on knitted fabrics in particular by making things out of clothes that I don’t think anyone else will want to wear. In a worst-case scenario, I can at least make furoshiki, Cloth fabric pieces, hemmed, used for reusable gift wrapping. I wish I had done it years ago, because we no longer do a lot of giftgiving… Mainly because people don’t need more junk in their lives. So no automatic giftgiving at any time. It happens when it happens, when we are inspired by a need for an interest.
I boxed nicnacks and put them away, months later took them out and donated what i really didnt want anymore. I continue to do this to declutter. This way i wont be mad at myself for giving away anything or regretting it. It gives me time to decide.
Yes...boxing stuff up works for me...even seasonal clothing. I look forward to opening the 'summer' clothes box, then wonder why I even hung onto most of it. I should tackle my kitchen again...too many cute cups and glasses!
I noticed as I went along that my “clutter threshold” changed and I came to appreciate more open space and breathing room in my home. That helped me stop bringing things in, and helped me put things away right away. Your brain literally changes. Thanks for this- great advice and I love your place.
I’m in my 60s and found at one point about 20 years ago I liked seeing space and baseboards. Since then I’ve wondered if I entered a different phase of life, switching from acquiring to create my young adult life to refining and curating the life I’d built.
Ahhh….putting things away right away. This makes me realize that I have so many things that don’t have a home in my house. They sit all over the place! Thank you. I must find them a home or get them out of here!! 🥰🥰
Love this idea! I fell in love with minimalism in 2011, with 5 kids and lots of chaos! I had to give myself permission to move slow with thoughtfulness and intention. One day I would take everything of ONE shelf of my book case, and evaluate each item. Some things I returned to the shelf, or re-homed, or donated. But that one shelf felt beautiful to me when I was finished. I did that for each individual surface in my house over time. Then, one drawer at a time, then one box at a time. Decluttering can be emotional and exhausting, so allow yourself small victories!!! They add up! ❤
I've been decluttering my home for about 6 months and it feels so good! I found stuff I forgot I had! I have quit shopping and decluttering has taken over that "obsession" to the point I really don't want to shop and waste money on items that won't bring value to me or my home.
I feel the same way. Decluttering helped me find clothes that I was planning on buying, but already had. It's like shopping through your own things. It's great!
At one point I was overcoming a shopping problem. I finally learned to say “I have everything I need today.” That helped me calm down and quit dragging home Stuff. I also take pictures of things I think I want to buy. If the item stays in my head and still looks good in the photo after a week or two has passed, I might consider going back to buy it.
I do that too, with taking the pictures! I do the same with online things, they go on a list and that list gets revisited every now and again, everything I totally forgot about or feels 'meh' gets taken off of it. Delayed buying is a great way to make sure you only get what you really need/like!
When my uncle died years ago. The whole family had to clear out his house. He had boxes stacked to the roof in his two room house. He had only enough cleared for his bed. It took us a whole weekend with more than 15 family members. I remember my other uncle saying they had no idea he had all this stuff in his house. I noticed all the un opened packages of books and anything else. I took a lot of books and read them. My brother took the old records and sold them. Lots of new clothes my uncle never wore. I thought of how much money he spent on things he never got to use. Till this day I remind my older relatives to start clearing out there belongings. It sounds mean though and I try to say it in a way that remember when we had to clear out uncle's house several years ago. It stays with you when you have to go through all those boxes of their belongings and sadly the life they just boxed up and forgot about.
Thank you for sharing this story. I read this randomly but it really resonated with me. I have a hard time letting go of momentos. The last part you wrote..."the life they just boxed up and forgot about" stuck with me. I go through my things now that I've kept in boxes and think to myself why is this in here where I dont see it, use it or enjoy it. Then I realize that I never really needed it in the first place. So I thank you for your words of wisdom.
There’s a name for that, it’s known as Swedish Death Cleaning. You clean out stuff that you don’t want to leave your family to have to deal with. I’ve heard people say that half of what makes a death so difficult is having to work out what to do with their stuff. I try to remember that. I don’t want to cause a burden to my family if something horrible were to happen.
I’m in the process of getting rid of about 98% of my belongings. The only way for me to do this is moving and super downsizing due to empty nest, poverty and disability. It’s so liberating!! I feel so much joy to give away items that are useful to some one else. I’m keeping a few treasures and will be setting up a minimalist bedroom. My soon to be roommate is very minimalist. It’s exciting.
Take photos of before and after. I didn’t think I was decluttering “enough” and I have much more to do but when I look at my “before” photos, I’m impressed at where I am compared to where I was.
For me it helped to start with decluttering. It made me realise how many things I spent money on, that weren't bringing me any happiness. And I felt bad about having to get rid of it. This made me determined to spend a lot less money on buying things, and to create more space for the things that matter to me.
Good point -- maybe sometimes decluttering can also motivate you to spend less. And it sounds like you've found a system that works for you, which is awesome!
Back when I did FB I joined a minimalist group, but these folks seemed so hung up on numbers of items, near empty closets, "capsule wardrobe"... Some were throwing out, or actually burning perfectly good items. To me this was pathological, not minimalism. Never about numbers; it's about simplicity and not letting possessions possess you. Buying that new shirt may give a temporary rush, but you'll only wear one at a time 🙂
That exactly my experience with FB minimalist groups as well. I used to run a blog as well but have since stopped blogging, left those groups. etc. I focus on my own life and how I want to live without any worry about being a "good minimalist" or anything of that stuff. Traded "Minimalism" for "minimalism".
every one starts out as a minimalist when they leave high school and get their first apartment. it is called being poor. but often people look back on their lives when they grow older and remember that that was often the happiest most freeing time of their lives. they did not have much but they felt happy.
lol i needed this- i moved out a couple months ago & brought nothing with me except my bed, dresser, and bookshelf & i keep watching these videos like “i don’t have anything to throw out yet” 😂😂 it’s nice to see how open everything is in this little basement suite, though!
Out biggest problem is we buy stuff we don't actually need, either because it looked cute, it was on sale or it is the latest and greatest shinieest model... if we just stop buying stuff we don't actually need, we will all be such better shape...
I never lived in a minimalist home because I already had lots of stuff to bring into that apartment, majority were things I either have gotten as a gift or my mom bought to me, and maybe a little I bought on my own (but naturally didn't buy a lot of stuff myself, as I didn't have my own account and control of those money). When I think of it, my apartment was quite empty in the very beginning when I was still in the process of moving, but that actually made me feel uncomfortable (a lot) in the space and things got much better once I got a few things in and some color. I dont think I prefer any extremely minimalist look. But minimalism as a lifestyle is good for reducing your spending, both saving money and reducing impact on the envirorment
Really useful thank you. I started doing massive decluttering and ended up buying back some items of clothes on eBay after realising I missed them in my wardrobe and they were items I really loved. I got a bit hooked on watching influences and trying to replicate their style rather than realising what truly suited me. X
Once you know your style, once you know what is truly becoming in terms of color, pattern, texture, sheen, structure, line - it is incredibly freeing and simplifying. You can walk past nearly everything in the store and pick out the few things that are possibilities, try them on and make a quick decision. Or you know which pattern to pick, which fabrics to pick.
I love how you mentioned accepting the risk that you might get rid of something you want or need... as in: giving yourself permission to make that mistake, that it's part of the process and that it is worth it for the overall peace of mind. That is such a key reframe to be able to get over the "what if" and "maybe I'll decide about this one later... (aka never)"
You're absolutely right. I am 63 and have SO much from relatives passing on and friends buying gifts over the yrs. I have saved items for my sons to save them money like their baby cribs, etc., but they do not want it. Younger ppl want less and less items, not grandma's antique stuff. I browse in shops for something to do, but rarely buy. I just have too much, chipping away at giving away or selling.
My adult kids are Minimalists even though they don’t follow that...I’ve talked with my kids, they are not interested in my stuff. My mom passed away 5 1/2 years ago & I still have barely started to get rid of her things. I’m hoping this spring & summer I will finally start to declutter. I wish I would have started years ago. Realizing I don’t want a lot of things.
It’s absolute always evolving. Over the years, I have practice this philosophy. It’s never really a constant practice. And things change - your ideas about what makes you happy. ❤️👍🏽
Decluttering comes from Feng Shui its one aspect of it . Simplifying and organizing to have less "yin" which can create illness and more "yang " energy in ones space . Gives you more energy or upliftment . That its only one aspect . is think minimalists are lazy ones who want to decluttering but not want to understand Fung Shui which is an entire system of placement , colors , lie lines of energy movement that changes. Nasa conducted a study proving 85% based on science Feng Shui works . Its symbolic what we see we program into our brain subconsciously - art , colors items and their representation to us ; as well as how they energy of the planet is moving ... Not too mention decluttering . But I agree its much better to focus on what you do love , want and can use rather then having items that are u need unloved just sitting around . I think in terms of what I want to create in my home , what I love... I want surrounding me and giving myself permission to have that n let go of the rest
Oh my goodness, I can relate so much to exactly what you're saying .But now I've changed my mindset .I've donated now 60 - 70 % of my clothing and knick knacks ect. ...Yes ! Yes! Yes ! You're 100% correct !
I've come to minimalism gradually over about 10 years, during which I moved house 10 times. Each move involved packing things away and making a conscious decision that I wanted this object to stay in my life and that it was worth the time and energy of moving it. This, coupled with becoming more environmentally conscious (and therefore feeling guilty every time I threw something out) caused me to really consider every purchase and think about "if the time comes when I need to throw this out (e.g. if it breaks and isn't fixable), what impact will it have on the environment?" My partner and I have just moved into our first owned home, and many people were surprised with how quick and simple and stress free the move was because we just didn't have a lot to move (genuinely didn't start packing until the day of the move). In addition, we both work full time and comfortably save about half of our joint income, which meant we were able to increase our deposit and so afford the home we bought, and has also meant that 6 months after spending almost all our money on buying the house, we've now saved enough for a pretty decent wedding.
If a room is making you crazy, empty it. Then put back your favorites until it feels right. Get rid of as many of those leftovers as you can.then pack up the few pieces that your unsure of. Put them in garage or basement or wherever. If you get through the year. You can get rid of those too.
This hit it for me. I believe this will definitely be the cure for my overwhelming closet. I have way too much but find it so hard to just get rid of most of it. This will be a great way to determine if it returns back to the closet or gets donated or given away after a year. I’m certain i won’t even think about it after a year. Thanks for sharing this 👍🏽👍🏽
I tend to agree, I did the same thing I started downsizing prior to changing my mindset then got frustrated when it felt like nothing was changing. But when I took a step back and took a long hard look at how I viewed my possessions my perspective changed. In this life you can either own your stuff or your stuff can own you. Are you working a job you hate to buy stuff you don't really need to impress people you really don't like. That was me for years, no matter how much stuff I bought it wasn't enough, I had to have the latest toy the newest gadget, I would prowl the internet for what was coming out and how it would change my life. Then something happened that made me realize that the insanity had to stop. I lost both of my parents in under a year with two households I had to sort out go through and figure out what to do with all their stuff. That is truly an eye opener, when you are surrounded by chaos and insanity while your heart is breaking and having to make long term decisions on what to keep and what to get rid of. I think of those as the darkest days of my life but also the beginning of a new mindset. I realized when I die I don't want to leave this chaos for my loved ones to deal with. They are going to have enough emotional baggage to wrestle when I am gone. Which also leads to a more profound am I truly happy conversation and what needs to change to make that statement true. I think we all get to a point in our lives when we realize that we are no more than a hamster on an exercise wheel unless we figure out how to stop spinning and start moving towards our goals. And we often have to adjust our perspective and our actions to match our goals if we ever dream of obtaining them. When I changed my mindset on shopping the rest became much easier. Now if I shop it is with purpose. It is to replace something I wore out and I do allow myself to try something new occasionally but I usually limit that to one item per 3 months to give me time to truly try it and see if it fits me personally and my own unique style before deciding it if is a long term addition to my life. I went from having to have two closets full of clothes I never wore to half a closet that everything in it I love and when I fall out of love with them, they are donated to a woman's shelter to help others with a fresh start in their own lives. I used to have an entire wall of shoes but realized I had most of them because they were pretty but not very functional or comfortable. Now I only invest in shoes I will truly wear or use on a regular basis. Do I have my one or two pair of I love these I just don't wear, yes of course but it brings me joy and the memories involved in those pieces justify their space in my home. Being a minimalist isn't just about owning less stuff it is about the thought and care you take with the items you have in your life. It is also about streamlining the decisions you must face on a daily basis so that you can concentrate on what is truly important, you happiness and joy in this world. Think about it, If you take one year of your life how much time does it take every day to pick out an outfit for the day, if you took that time and combined it for a week how much time could you have saved? How about month or a year? If you put all those chunks of time together that you don't spend searching for an item lost in the chaos or having to second guess what you look good in what else could you accomplish with your time? We all complain we don't have enough time and that becomes more and more evident the older we get. That is why I try to be a minimalist. It saves me time and stress because I am no longer sweating the stupid stuff, I am no longer searching for what I need in chaos and I am no longer fighting for a moment to sit back and enjoy my life because I am no longer working to buy stuff I don't need to impress people I don't like and I have for the first time in my life gotten my priorities straight and my life in some sort of order.
Brilliantly said!! 👏🏼👏🏼 So glad you discovered what really brought you peace. I came to the same discovery when we would go camping in our RV with almost none of our belongings and yet the most peaceful and freeing feeling every time, not missing any of our stuff at home. Then we had to move to the other side of the world and were only able to take 25% of our belongings with us; after going through the painful and time consuming process of selling and/or donating 50% of our stuff and putting the other 25% in storage (much of which I quickly forgot about anyway) - I decided it just wasn't worth it to have so much stuff. I never want to feel prisoner to excess stuff again.
Some years ago we moved to a smaller house and I got rid of a lot of stuff and have never missed any of it EXCEPT for my books. Be careful getting rid of your books! I had thought if I ever wanted to re-read a certain title I could just check it out from the library --- not true! Books are my friends, and a lot of my favorite ones are old and have been out of print a long time, and many libraries have done their own de-cluttering and tossed them. Sometimes you can't even get it on WorldCat, and to buy a used copy is prohibitively expensive. I wish I still had my books that I got rid of.
I found that not going into the stores helped me. Now I order things online (it's mindful shopping- no more impulse buying) and do grocery pickup (where I order groceries from my AP and pick them up from the store) has stopped so much impulse and recreational buying. Now that less stuff is coming into the house, I can keep on top of things.
So smart to figure out what specific ways of shopping leave a person less vulnerable to impulse buying. It's so true, if we affect our environment, we're more likely to have success. Thanks for the comment!
I got really interested into minimalism in 2019. And for the past 1.5 years I have decided not to buy any stuff and have been enjoying the ones I own. I felt this is the actual way of minimalism just like what you have thought. My plan is to use everything I own completely and then buy new ones only if I need one. Actually, I have felt a lot happier with this method. I would have hated and spent a lot if I had done decluttering and bought new stuffs.
Same here! I am "using up" everything I already have and not buying anything new until the old is used up. Some things I really don't use I will sell or donate. I also think that if I "force declutter" all my clothes, I'll end up buying new ones. Because it's nice to have that variety, even if some things I rarely ever wear. Now I feel like I have one item of everything I might like to wear, so I don't feel an urge to go shopping. And by slowly using up what I have, I may slowly thin out my wardrobe and get used to that anyway. Letting the minimalism sneak in if it wants to...
Agree. I actually was decluttering and sending things to sell and it was “hurting” and instead stopped that and started my three month no buy and enjoy what I have. So very similar to what you’re saying.
@Greyson Francis good luck!! When I was tempted I started writing in a journal... why I wanting the thing-with details, followed by why I had committed not to and where that money could go.
I totally had to tell my neighbors and family “I can’t take any free gifts right now, I’m decluttering for my mental health!” Sometimes people don’t get it, and they kept trying to give me stuff they thought I needed. I just needed them to understand that my cup runneth over already. I don’t want anymore!✌️😄
We had a friend who kept giving us stuff a couple of years ago which neither of us really wanted. In addition to not wanting it because you have enough already, it's usually (in my opinion), ugly stuff. I feel bad for rejecting it in some ways because it's nice to give folks stuff but it's only a burden if people don't want it or don't like it. Many years ago we had a neighbour give us a lawn mower on the basis that they didn't have room for it at their house and she wouldn't listen to me when I told her we didn't have room for it either (at the time we were in a flat which only really has two rooms - a bedroom and a living room combined kitchen, in addition to the bathroom and a narrow hallway. We ended up leaving it in the garden because I got fed up of moving it when I wanted to shower and it got stolen. Then there are others who dump unwanted furniture on you - they would be better donating it to a charity if they want to get rid of stuff than offloading it on friends and neighbours.
Just found your channel while clearing out my 1k+ long "watch later" playlist and love it! Mindset is really so much more important than technique. Once you get your mindset straight and know why you're doing it, the how becomes almost self evident.
Girl your so on point with wanting to buy more after decluttering, I’ve gotten trapped in this mindset of buying after getting rid of things. Glad to know that we can change our mindset to not need to keep bringing excess things into our life.
i think the hardest thing about minimalism is tackling the mindset that comes from poverty. when you're poor it's harder to let go of something because you have no idea if you'll ever have the money to buy it again if you ever find yourself needing it. we don't always get nice things so we hold on a little too tightly to the things we do have. i also think its easier for someone feel justified being a hoarder when a lot of things were free/on sale. even if you find yourself coming into some money its hard to shake that scarcity mindset. untreated anxiety, depression, and other mental illnesses add a lot to this as well
That is probably the most important factor in this. A lot of these online "minimalists" obviously have a high enough income to replace things if they need them. A lot of people won't have that flexibility.
@@jackiehamilton2738 yea for sure. plus they have the money to invest up front in higher quality items that wont need frequent replacement. alot of us have to just settle with what we can afford which often means things that will eventually fall apart on us
For real. Had struggled for a long time and even had a disease that eventually took me out of working. One income family and we decided to homeschool. My homeschool is minimalist but that actually means I have a full library of books and we use paper, pencil and books and every kids uses the same books eventually, I even print my own books. But minimalist in this area for us means packed bookshelves. I spend thousands less than my friends who homeschool and every year they might only have a stack of workbooks per kid and not need all the storage we do. But I own everything k-12 in all subjects and reusable. For years my weight changed from my illness and I had bags and bags if clothes because I got rid of Nothing because I had no money for clothes. I take hand me downs and mostly wore clothes from my grandmother. Ppl made fun of me at 30 dressed like a grandma but really I didn't care I had nice skirts for free that didn't fall off me. I'm learning to let go of things I really don't need and find my stability more in my marriage than in things I cling to. We talk of downsizing but the books are a none negotiable
I have a hard time stopping the incoming stuff. I am constantly getting rid of stuff but I do feel like I’m replacing those items so it seems like my inventory hasn’t changed. I love the way you worded it! Thank you!
I really love your perspective! You’re a smart, independent thinker! Not one minimalist (and I’ve been watching and reading them for a decade) has EVER shared this perspective before. Thank you!
I unknowingly started minimalism journey by changing my habits. I was learning about if for years and I always thought that it's crazy to live like that. Until I realized that the crazy one is me, with my shopaholism and hoarding tendencies. So I started by buying less and using what I already have (cosmetics) and organizing, because I wasn't ready to declutter and let go of my stuff. Then I read Marie Kondo book and I felt like I can do it and I did. I declutter using her method, change my habits even more and now minimalism is my reality. It took me 7 years to get to this point, but it was so worth it.
I recently tossed/donated every clothing item I didn’t wear and also the ones that didn’t fit well. And made the investments i needed to do in order to gain a better wardrobe without being overwhelmed by the amount i own. I’m glad and happy i did it so mindful. ☺️
I lived in a tent for a couple of years...talk about minimalism!!! Then I moved into a refurbished Garage for 13 years and accumulated "ALOT" of stuff Now I'm in a small house and when I moved I down sized so much that my dwelling place was empty...hollow....devoid of any personality at all. It had no character without "MY" handprint, heartprint, headprint.....I hadn't put "MY" mark on the space; the things that bring me joy and tell others who I am through my life space. After 2.5 years I've found some balance between what I had in the Garage, and what I had when I first moved where I am now. I added lots of fabrics in many textures, colors and styles....I love changing my environment often, and fabrics are perfect in a rental. I added back some basic furniture...like storage pieces for my supplies that I use in my publishing business. I am not a minimalist...but I do like order and efficiency....I edit my space quite often, and I'm constantly playing with the contents of my home. I'm an aesthetic artist and home maker...so I enjoy the process of displaying my passions, but not just random collections. Everything has substance and usually "works" in my space...nothing is simply pretty to look at...it has to function as something too...be useful to the whole system in many ways. My definition of minimalism is to have just enough in my possession that I'm living in pure love and joy....I want to feel "full" because the pieces are rich in color, texture, flavor, aroma, sound...all my senses are stimulated on a regular basis, because I have some sense of emotion about my belongings. Home making is a beautiful balance between the pragmatic/practical and the warm/comfortable/beautiful. Every person has their own perceptions of what that means, and if you "LOVE" an empty house...then have it. But I don't think we need to define Minimalism as just ONE way of living....Perception & Emotion define things in many ways.
I do like the practice of having less and I am doing a lot of decluttering. I stop going with the flow tho in some of the kitchen things. I like my red keurig coffee machine to sit out. I like my red salt and pepper shaker to sit on the counter. I like my air fryer/toaster oven to stay on the counter as it gets used multiple times a day by my family with two sons who eat at other than regular meal times. I like a bowl on my dining table with my table runner. I think you should get it to where you feel comfortable, easier to clean but still decorated with what you like.🤗
Very true!! 👏🏼 As much as I love the look of a sparse kitchen, I love having what I need, where I need it, when I need it - even more. Not only do I not have much cabinet space but my family uses things like our Keurig and toaster several times per day, not practical for us to be putting that away after each use just to have a minimalist look. Love the idea of to each their own, instead of one cookie cutter way of doing "minimalism".
So true - I love my gracefully curving Saladmaster machine, a manual slicer-shredder tool, right on my kitchen counter for making short work of vegetables as I fix dinner. It’s like a work of art that’s functional, it doesn’t have any ugly wires sticking out. Depending on the produce I have on hand, it’s either sitting in a graceful wooden bowl or basket on the kitchen counter, ready to go. Right now, I love my arrangement of aloe vera in a pale green ceramic pot and some pussy willow in a small curved white vase and some aqua candles as my kitchen table centerpiece arrangement. The absence of other clutter makes it a fun ritual to just mess with a couple of things and indulge in a little artistic home keeping.
Absolutely agree! There is no right or wrong way to "do" minimalism. I strive for living an intentional life with my children and myself. Keeping only things that bring me happiness and value. I got so tired of the stigma that you can only have 5 things in order to be a "real" minimalist. Thanks for bringing this conversation to the table- it's so important for people to hear!
This was fascinating insight, because I'm a maximalist. And I also live with gratitude. Over half of my furnishings I have found on the streets of my city, and I have gratitude for each and every item. They all bring me joy and comfort.
So your an opportunist and hoarder , i think most of us get to point when enough is enough , especially if things turn into clutter and don’t get used and become dust collectors, at that point decisions should be made i really think, I’m getting rid of so many things , just thinking about makes me feel better .
@@fishmut as someone who was once a maximalist and is now a minimalist, that doesn’t automatically mean hoarder. hoarding- a persistent difficulty discarding or parting with possessions because of a perceived need to save them. maximalism- a style or technique that embraces excess and extravagance. do research
So many comments in such a short time! I'm a 68 yr. old man living in a ~250 sq. ft. senior apt. Known I've needed to "clean house" for a long time. Feeling on the brink of jumping off that cliff. Thanks for your videos. Also absorbing experience from the "Nomadland" folks. ---- On the cusp of change, I think.
That thing about gratitude is so wise! I heard something similar from Marie Kondo, who said something like “of course your screwdriver doesn’t fill you with joy, but if it works, you can be grateful to it and so you should keep it” (ok, she didn’t say that, but something along those lines). This also reminded me of a challenge Debt Kicking Mom does, when she doesn’t buy new stuff (for financial reasons,not so much minimalism), but tries to find new appreciation for the things she has.
Living your life with a minimalist approach is a mindset, it has nothing to do with the physical stuff. Physical stuff is just energy. As soon as you are in your right mindset, the wrong stuff will disappear, and good energy will appear. And then the strength to say no thanks when it's needed. Hiking alone for 2 months taught me a lot about me being enough and living with only is on my back. Great video Elin!
Everything same for me. I had to slowly discover for myself that nothing was going to change until I stopped WANTING things, shopping, etc. I wish someone had told me!
Thanks for a great video!!! I knew something had to change when every time we moved (which was often for a while), we LOVED the feeling of the empty new house before all our stuff arrived, more than having our belongings with us. It was always such a light and stress-free feeling (sleeping on air mattresses, eating on the floor and playing card games), without our creature comforts and luxuries.
Thank goodness l found you! Thank you for no babbling, giggling, and repeating yourself. Thank you for not wasting my time with a bunch of nonsense. I am anxious to watch more of your videos.
This was such a clear and thought out video! I've started with my highest 'turnover' areas - my beauty products. I feel that if I can develop a minimalist mindset there then I can apply that to other spaces. I've been filming my no buy progress and tracking my empties so I can look back over this year and truly reflect. I think minimalism is quite a slow process - something people seem to rush and then regret, Thank you!
the one thing i felt i should invest in after getting rid of so much, was a good bag. i wasn’t truly happy with any of the purses i had, and i use one daily. i sold some, donated others, and then invested in one i knew i would continue to use for as long as it would last me.
I guess I am the weird one who has "missed" some of the things I threw out while decluttering. However, I have never missed them so much that I had to re-buy them. I am more aware of what I own now and have been able to find substitutes around the house. (which is almost kind of fun 😊)
I totally think that can happen -- missing things... but that's a good point that the missing didn't outweigh the other payoffs (or at least it sounds like that!)
@@Amy12358 I have gone down the road of one book in and one out, this way I keep books and don't overload my shelves but am quite choosy of what I buy. I have a book basket of books borrowed, to read and if this is full no more books are borrowed and I need to read ;-) best wishes to you
@@jossykerflossy915and @Amy- I feel the same way about books. And seriously, anyone who loves reading their books could have a hard time with the one book in/one book out method. I literally sold for pennies or donated 50 boxes of books, and I have missed a number of them. And no, they are not available at the library. And since the pandemic, they want an appointment to go to the library. At least say will take book orders over the phone and gather them from the different branches for pick up. But that’s not the same as browsing and touching and feeling the books. I still have more than I physically want to care for, (i’m thinking about how all of the bookshelves have to be emptied and moved for new carpet to go in), but… I miss some of my old friends. And due to a pipe burst, some of those bookcases had to be emptied, with boxes of books and bookshelves moved down into the hallway. It’s feeling a bit cluttered right now.
Wow, I am only 1/2 way through this video n you, my dear, have rang a tower bell in my head. I don’t know your name n hav NEVER seen any of your videos but you have already impacted my vision of my problem in “decluttering” - “organizing”. - “cleaning” or whatever I want to call it. Reducing/spending/enjoying/ being thankful for all the blessing our family has. Thank you. Why are we never satisfied with what we have? This is my new attitudes. I am a very fortunate women and so blessed. Things do NOT GIVE ME PLEASURE. Actually, lol, they give me stress! Crazy, that’s y I’m watching your video. TRYING TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO GET RID OF (. . ). THANK YOU, you are a very wise young women ❤
Something I realized in flipping my mindset is instead of seeing it as 'letting things go', I decided to ONLY keep the things I wanted ..in my various spaces. Then you really LOVE everything you decided to keep.
I am in the process of decluttering and so far your advice on stopping first the influx of new things makes so much sense. Thanks for your tips! It helped a lot 😊
So true ❤️ I started minimalism 10 years ago with a year of not expending on anything but necessities. That changed my way of thinking about wanting < needing. I really think that minimalism is a state of mind to want to simplify your life in every single one.
Also, influencer minimalism isn't minimalist, it's an aesthetic. Who can get the most wooden items and stone plates. Basically influencer minimalism is actually elite consumerism.
Ive given away over 3k books before i moved and another 1k to downsize and move again. Still going through more and donated another 1k since ive lived here. All the previous books i never got to read. I used to live in a 5 bedroom home, now in a 1 bedroom apartment thats full. Ive donated 3/4 of everything. No longer have a bed set, no couch or entertainment center. All the big furniture is gone. I only wish i had all the wasted money back for unneeded items. The reason i got rid of big items is if i can't move them by myself then they are history. Ive been disabled so thats the other reason. Actually wanted to declutter and not leave a mess to younger family members when i die. Years ago i gave to family. 2 years ago gave more to family. Now this year i boxed up 20 more boxes to give to family. Been donating much more again. Sold a few items, not much since no one is willing to pay for brand new in the box items. From a 5 bedroom to a 1 is very difficult, even the last ex took things i owned before i met them. Believe me im still struggling. I dont have much income to buy more yet it seems the more i dig out to give away the more i have. Its never ending. You wouldn't believe it, but i donated 55 lawn bags of clothes in the last 15 years. Half these clothes were never worn, too small now. I keep moving it out and still have plenty. I try to think back and wonder when i had so much time to buy all these things and clothes, most were bought from 15 to 25 years ago. I do regret things that have been stolen and some given away, would like them back since i cant afford to replace them. Some day i may be forced out of this place then the book shelves go, the kitchen table and chairs and microwave with stand. Its getting down to bare necessities. Ill be left with all folding furniture. Im not happy where inflation is going. Rent went up twice since ive been here. One more time and i may be booted to the curb not able to afford any place. Id rather live in my truck than a rat or bug infested part of a city.
This is such an insightful video! I’m glad you talk about how everyone’s journeys are different, I can’t agree more! I’m beginning my minimalism journey and haven’t had access to my things (I’ve been quarantined out of the country for the last year) and it has really changed my mindset and I can’t wait to return and apply what I’ve learned to ALL of my things. I really enjoy your videos, thank you for sharing your journey :)
Yes!! You could not have explained minimalism any better. The change of mindset has to come first and is at the heart of minimalism. I trained myself to reflect before I buy: "Do I need this?" or "Do I want this?" Also, just because something is beautiful, cute, or could be worth money one day doesn't mean I need to buy it. I love how airy and cozy my home feels. My nighttime routine is so much easier and waking up to a clean, straighten up home allows me to drink some tea and listen to my sermons without being distracted about things I need to get done before my kids wake up. It is a huge blessing. I'm not the perfect "minimalist" but I found that I am more content with less. :) By the way, your kitchen is absolutely gorgeous!!
I find that not enough minimalist influencers don't talk about this trap that when you have decluttered it can feel tempting to buy a new piece to fill up that empty space ! Thank you for reminding me of that! 😊
I love the editing of your videos! I found what you said about gratitude for what you already have & not buying MORE new things especially valuable. Whoever reads this just remember there is NO such thing as a perfect minimalist. Minimalism is finding what works best for YOU! Thank you for making content Slice of Light!
"...focusing on what you are enjoying now rather than the future and what could be better" Excellent takeaway! I would also add that being able to let go of who you were and what your interests were in the past is a great help too. I have found in my minimalism journey that I hang onto things longer than I really want to "just in case" my interest for something is sparked again. I know I go through phases, but also there comes a time when I realize that I probably am NOT going to take up a particular hobby again and it is time to part ways. In truth, if I DO want to take it up again or read a book again or whatever, I am content with the idea that I may spend money on some supplies again, but that is a lower price for me to pay than having those things take up space in my life when they serve me no purpose for possibly years!
Absolutely!! I heard the phase called ‘fantasy self’ I had projects I was going to do when I retired lol nope!! Not happening, different interests now and minimalism IS the best way forward for peace and joy for me 😊
I totally agree....STOP the buying and STOP things coming into the house (my life), then declutter and declutter ruthlessly ! :) freedom from clutter=peace of mind.
I love what you said about enjoying what you have, and being mindful. It is 5 years for me now, and I appreciate and love everything I have, the less you have the more you love what you do have... To be honest all I have donated & sold, I haven’t thought of one thing since it is gone,
A game changer for me toward minimalism was Marie kondo " THE ART OF TIDYING UP" instead of decluttering by room declutter by category. Keep what gives you joy
I wish people would just stop with telling others they have to be extreme minimalism. If you love something then keep it and stop telling others that they should get rid of everything. Everyones idea of a peaceful home is different.myself i hate clutter but love a warm inviteing space. Someone else may love and empty room. I believe it is wrong for influencers to tell everyone they can only be happy if they live this lufe. The oranganal meaning was not a completely spare empty space.
Minimalism is natural and fine for some people. But, more than likely overall it’s a scam. A way to get people to get rid of everything so in a few years maximalism will be back in style and then folks buy all over again. Not saying the content creators are aware of this. I’m sure most are being honest. But, fashion, whether home or clothing is a trap. Just like they change up colors, shapes, styles often. This is to keep us dissatisfied and consuming. Me personally, I’m not either. I’m a middleist! Lol! I try not to fall into the whole buy, buy, buy, trap but also feel more comfortable with a few more items around. Honestly, we do need to spend a lot less time on RUclips, Pinterest, Instagram and the like. These all make people yearn for something different or something more. For me I just want to enjoy the days simply, enjoy living my real life, not some Facebook one! Being thankful for each day cause we only get one go round!
This is the first video I have watched on your channel, and I have to say that this is the best and most satisfying video I've watched in quite a while. I love your style and how you format your videos; keep it up!!
Absolutely. If you are buying all the time, it's counter productive. I am trying to pair down my stuff so I can appreciate what I really like to have out. I hear and agree with your approach.
Your video is so helpful!!! I never felt like my de-cluttering was effective enough. I now know why--I’m still trying to hold on to too much stuff. Most of the time, I don’t even know that stuff, especially clothes, is there. I’m seriously going to keep only the things that I wear or use regularly. Everything else will be a blessing for someone else.
You are absolutely right in your analysis! I did some declutter first a massive one for books as I had books lining everywall of my spare bedroom, it became overwhelming! I decluttered also a lot of clothes as I was finding my "style" and getting rid of the ones I hardly wore! But I was still buying clothes as I shop 2nd hand and it is often very cheap! So now I have to stop going thrifting and accumulating! The pandemy helped!!! I am definitely going to shop more intentionally and stop the flow in!!!
Thankyou for sharing! Some nice tips! I personally am still on my minimalism journey. I started with trying to buy less and appreciate what I already have. I now keep a list of the things that I buy (with this I mean objects like clothing, plates, cups, plants etcetera) and so far I have only bought a couple of things which most of them I really needed them. This list makes me think twice about what I might want to buy because at the end of the year I dont want to have an huge list.
I am 100% agree with you !! Let's do the minimalism base on our own style/way, because each of us having different kind of clutters problem, what works to other doesn't mean match to solve our problem
I completely agree with you that decluttering or purging doesn't do much if we don't makes changes to aquire less. I've taken steps to aquire less, but still have a lot to go though in the purging process.
Yeah, it definitely takes a while! I kind of think maybe it just becomes a habit rather than a final destination--I'm working at it, too. :) Thanks for sharing!
It took me 8 months, but I am so glad I found this video! I have been asking myself all of those questions for 2 years. I have decluttered so many times and struggle with changing the way I shop and manage my time, so nothing has changed long term! I am ready to put this all into practice!
Great video. I'd add that we need to face the reasons WHY we are compelled to constantly buy stuff we do not need (and sometimes, don't even really want). Until we face those reasons and patterns, we will just repeat the cycle: purge/buy/guilt-chaos/purge/buy etc. ad infinitum.
Loved your video! Especially the thought that every item you are looking at is reminding you to do something about it, take care of it, repair it, dust it... that’s so true and exactly what I’ve discovered as well. Such a thoughtful way to approach the topic of minimalism!
I started my journey to minimalism recently. I’m starting simply by whenever I go shopping before I check out an item I ask myself a couple times “am I actually ever gonna wear this” or “how often am I gonna wear it”. It’s really tempting to get more things but it’s help me a lot
Awesome video. I'm so glad I found your channel. I just happen to already be doing it this way because I bought the book "goodbye things" and he blew my mind about WHYYYYY I was gathering. It stopped me dead in my tracks and I was able to be way more intentional about any item I picked up that wasn't in my possession that I was thinking of acquiring. When I stopped caring about impressing others which he talks about, I was able to vastly stop acquiring. I love the "enjoy what you have" thanks for this vid. By the way, you are soooooo pretty and your hair color is soooooo pretty. : )
This makes a lot of sense - I have also done the exact same thing - decluttering a ton but not getting rid of the on the fence items and lots of new stuff always coming in
Your videos have truly inspired me! Thank you for creating such wonderful content and I look forward to supporting you and seeing your channel grow! Congrats on over 1,000 subscribers! 🌼
I did exactly what you said, decluttered my wardrobe and bought more! My mindset isn't correct Yet! So I understand how important 😌 mindset is...thanks 😊
If I just declutter my space I won't maintain it unless I have an organizational system in place. I agree that you have to really concentrate on not "replacing" the items you get rid of with other items. It's very tempting to fill that space back up with new clutter.
After the unexpected passing of my husband I am overwhelmed by decluttering. Not only am I trying to let go of his things, I have an attic full of inherited sentimental boxes. I appreciate your grace of understanding it can be quite difficult. I do believe I need someone to help me. I'm not young & simply making boxes for donation I have to have help getting them down stairs. I just subscribed to your channel & look forward to your soothing voice. 😊
I'm sorry, Catherine. How painful. Do a little bit for five days out of the week. Break over the weekend and pick it up again on Monday. Ask yourself 'is there anyone who would want this'? 'Do "I" still want it, or am I keeping it out of guilt'? If you think any of your things have value, some on here have mentioned using an auctioneer. Only make sure a trusted family member or friend is with you when the evaluation takes place.
@@melissakalloway1916, thank you for your condolences. I have been trying to think of special people who may like this or that. I have much that I have found to be valuable. I've been watching Dr. Lori on RUclips & she is helping tremendously. I want to simply give everything away. However, I could use the $$ to make repairs on my home. Lots to be done. Haven't even gotten up in my attic yet. 🙃 Thank God for the friends/neighbors who are more than willing to help me. I have to be very patient. They have family, homes & jobs of their own. But, if something happens they will drop everything to come to my aid. I love them so much. ❤️✌️
There´s the real minimalism: being intentional about what we buy and what we keep, and then there's the social media version: wearing the same t-shirt for one year, confusing "minimalist homes" with nicely decorated homes, presenting the idea that to be a true minimalist you should purchase more stuff to help you in your journey (a smartwatch, an expensive notebook for your journaling, an expensive laptop for posting on social media about how you've changed your lifestyle).
Look at the Amish if you want to see minimalism.They don't seem to have anything thats not necessary, no extra pieces of furniture, clothing, no gadgets, kids don't have ten tons of toys each, minimalist homes are so much easier to clean and of course its easier to find things and that cuts out a lot of frustration especially when you have kids that are always misplacing things.
So glad I saw this video! Thank you for sharing your experience and your thoughts. I have been decluttering for a few years now and I would tell people that I am a minimalist but my spending habits did not change. Esp recently while I am going through stressful times, I noticed I look at the websites of my favorite brands more often and end up buying random things I like but don’t need right away. I knew I wasn’t truly embodying minimalism so I started to seek out videos/books about minimalism again and saw your video. This helped me a lot! Thank you so much.
I love this. I think you really hit the nail on the head about how people are doing minimalism backwards by simply decluttering. Love what you said about mindfulness and the stuff you already have (aha moment!). What has helped me the most with not collecting stuff was focusing on reducing waste for the environment... that has been my major mind shift.
I started minimalism by changing habits. I changed my job, my schedule, my shopping habits & limiting what was coming into my home. Then I started decluttering areas one at a time. I started with my closet because that was easy for me. I then did the rest of my bedroom. Then moved outward to other rooms. I have vigilantly protected the spaces once complete to make sure they stay decluttered & organized.
I also did a no-buy 2019, a low-buy 2020 and am doing a no-buy 2021. I find this helps me really focus on how I am living, what I am enjoying and what I want more/less of in my life.
Now when a space feels "wrong" to me, I tidy it and take a picture. I then look at the picture to identify what it is about the space that bothers me. It gives me a degree of seperation from the items.
Wow, thanks for sharing your process! That's incredibly helpful and inspiring! I like your strategies!
Ritalyn I am so impressed that you did low buy, no buy. That is very hard for me even to do one month,but I think my problem may be depression.
I love the word and idea of "protected" here.
Thank you for sharing your process. I must try this.
Going to try this whole method! Thank you for sharing.
Minimalism isn't about throwing out your stuff. It's about realizing most of the stuff advertised to you is for stuff you don't need. Only get what you really need, and don't buy things you don't. Buy quality that will last a long time. I have had one sofa etc for 30 yrs and it will last probably 20-30 more.
Great comment, and I couldn't agree more. I refuse to buy any more crap I don't need. I'm in the process of decluttering now, and it is such a great feeling to get rid of "stuff."
It’s just how old money tends to live
Would you mind telling me the brand of couch? Thank you. I would love a good quality couch
@@lesliethomas8983 me, too! Or is it worth having a couch forever?
I seriously need to.bear this in mind. I'm a extreme declutterer but also I have a bit of a buying addiction it doesnt matter if Its 10p but I must buy things. I dont use credit cards or anything so it's well.within my means. Thankgod I've just began selling on ebay. I also buy second hand on ebay now or upcycled if I need furniture. I'm.also someone that suffers from fairly extreme mood changes and style changes. I switch over night it's so difficult haa.
I started down the path of minimalism before I even knew there was an actual name for it. My husband and I lost both of our parents close together and we had the unenviable task of cleaning out 2 packed houses along with assorted storage sheds and work shops. It took months and was just so overwhelming on top of the grief. One day we came home with boxes and boxes of our parents “stuff” and it hit me that I was going to leave my children in the same situation if I didn’t change drastically. We started giving away to family, friends and charities. I have some sentimental things that I just can’t part with but my children will not have to deal with a mess when I’m gone.
I've been through the same situation except instead of bringing stuff home, when we got home, my husband and I went through and got rid of a bunch of stuff. We cleaned out our house. Our kids weren't too happy with us. We had gotten rid of a bunch of their toys and now that they are grown, they still remind us. 😊 But when you go through the trauma of losing those close to you and then having to go through their piles, it changes your mindset. That was many years ago, and I'm still not a minimalist, but I do keep the question in mind of what am I leaving my family to have to deal with?
I have this problem to look forward to. I love my mom more than anything and she deserves to have whatever she wants. However she has a lot of stuff. She has sentimental items from at least 3 generations on her side of my family alone. For example, she can't bear to part with the dishes that were used when she was growing up, but she doesn't use them now. Also, she collects anything that she thinks she will use. I recently started my own minimalism journey and have tried talking to her about it, but it doesn't seem to be working. 😕
@@kimhr1069 No. It probably won't work. Not only does it most likely seem a huge task, she likes her stuff and thinks she will miss it. She also probably doesn't want to see it go to just anybody, but wants to keep it in the family.
When we cleaned out my dad's house, my siblings came home for the funeral. First, we decided on which items should be sold either at auction or privately - the house at auction, a valuable collection privately - and then I got each of us a different color of masking tape and starting with the oldest we took turns putting tape on anything we wanted. If someone was done before everyone else and didn't want more, that was fine; if someone wanted to keep going and take more, that was fine too. Everything that was left we sold at the auction with the house.
If someone wants to take on the task of selling individual items separately, they will bring more money, but for us, we just wanted to be done, so we chose an auction.
I hope you have a long time left with your mom, and when the time does come, I hope this helps.
@@jumbalayaismisspeells3363 Thank you for the great information and sweet thoughts. I hope I have a very long time with my mom, too, before I ever have to use your incredibly well thought out and organized ideas.
When my dad died, mom bought a storage shed for all his stuff. When my mom died, each sibling took what they wanted, we took 5 trips to the dump, we held 3 separate estate sales, the veterans thrift store took 7 truck and trailer loads, and I still brought home enough stuff to fill a 38' box trailer!!! This is something I do not want to pass onto my kid. But here it is, 12 years later, & I'm still going through the stuff.
Instead of aiming for "minimalism" I'm going to strive for "contentment-ism" 😉thanks to what you've said here at the end!
Love this! Contentment-ism!
I love this. Since we started decluttering more (I definitely can't claim to be a minimalist yet) we have truly come to appreciate our home. Before, I was always thinking "I need more storage" or "I want to renovate" but now I just love it how it is! Gratitude is always the best attitude
@Marie Caldwell love it
@@ElinLesser Contentment-ism is gaining happiness thanks to shopping ultra-abundance.
Brilliant
Me and my husband had to start minimalism. There was one time he was like I DONT HAVE SHIRTS TO WEAR! I counted all his shirts that night and counted 74 shirts and 8 pants. I told him afterwards, he was very disappointed with himself. We started to sort out his clothes, sold some and then donated most. Now he has 15 shirts and is very happy with it. He gets to wear all of them in 2 weeks (just in time for laundry) and we have so much closet space! IT is the way to go
Shame...is a hellava tool...?
It's like kids with too many toys. Too many toys causes the child to be UNABLE to settle down with one or two toys and play more deeply. If the child has five favorite sets of toys, say, Legos, matchbox cars, Lincoln logs, small doll house and little toy animals, he can be quite content for days on end. Add 20 computer games, six more Lego sets, 12 jigsaw puzzles and 25 board games and you have children who can't pick from all those choices, and when they finally DO pick they play a little bit, then are distracted by another toy and soon there are toy sets strewn all over the floor. Ask your child which five toys are his favorites and then slowly whittle down the ones he just never plays with. Instead of making this feel punitive, as if you are punishing them by taking away toys, look at it like a good deed, giving away the toys he doesn't really care about to kids who have nothing by donating to Goodwill or a second hand shop or church garage sale. Introduce the idea of sharing and charitable choices early in their lives. Most American kids have WAY too many toys, especially stuffed animals which just gather dust, leading to dust mite allergies. If a child has a lovey animal and two others that is sufficient. Launder all the other ones that have never been played with and donate them to a battered women's shelter. Hospitals also sometimes use them for kids who come into the ER with no lovey.
So relatable. Once you're able to see what you WANT to wear then you can build your time around it
I am sad to read about the disappointment. That should never be the goal. But, yes, when you can't see the few items you enjoy or love amongst the clutter, it's depressing. Clarifying what you really love, you get a better sense of identity and self, too. Because you get clear on what you need and what you don't, what serves you and what doesn't.
YES
I'm disabled and minimalism helps me to look after my apartment better. Plus I like the way it feels 😌.
That's awesome! Thanks for sharing. :)
Agreed! I'm legally blind and have been trying to declutter and downsize for a few years. Clear pathways, less stuff and a home for everything makes life simpler and safer and helps me stay independent. I still love art, home decor and cozy rooms, but find I can have all that on a smaller scale with just as much pleasure and meaning.
is comfortable amd chic
@@jennifermuchow2728 - The habit of creating clear pathways through your home, to your windows, around your furniture… It not only creates a safer home, but it creates a Home that feels more spacious and is easier to clean. And I think it is a lot easier to say no to shopping by beginning with This end in mind: safe, spacious, easy to clean.
I am somewhat limited mobility wise too. With less clutter, fewer items on display, you can clean SO much faster and you don't fall over, trip on, spill, knock over, or otherwise have "fights" with all your stuff. I also like the way more minimalism feels. Also minimalism is a philosophy and one is never "finished with" your stuff, nor do you finally "arrive at" a minimalist home. It is ongoing, so it is a habit and practice. If you bring one new shirt home, you let another go to donate or trash. That way you are never again going to be cluttering. But now and then an area overtakes you, so you clean out that closet shelf or that drawer or that shoe rack.
There are so many youtubers that are constantly clearing out their closets for the sake of "minimalism" but then the next video will be a shopping haul
Exactly!
Consumerism causes death to animals and plants 😥
😀😀😀😀
- shop - buy - consume - die -
Are they by the same youtuber?
Biggest tip from me🌿:
Put everything you don't use daily/weekly in a box, hide it from yourself and take the things you miss from the box and find places for them. The rest are usually meaningless or can be reused, remade, donated or recycled.
Linnea Mai - I know someone in the vintage resale business and sometimes she picks through massive piles of clothing at a warehouse to find those special things hidden in the mess. I’ve never been one to go shopping for clothes just to go shopping for clothes. I have more than I need you to body size change, but I have also donated a lot especially after hurricanes and floods. But now I realize that those leftover clothing pieces doubt always find a Home if no one wants to buy them. I do some sewing so… I will be ramping up my skills on knitted fabrics in particular by making things out of clothes that I don’t think anyone else will want to wear. In a worst-case scenario, I can at least make furoshiki, Cloth fabric pieces, hemmed, used for reusable gift wrapping. I wish I had done it years ago, because we no longer do a lot of giftgiving… Mainly because people don’t need more junk in their lives. So no automatic giftgiving at any time. It happens when it happens, when we are inspired by a need for an interest.
Great tip
I boxed nicnacks and put them away, months later took them out and donated what i really didnt want anymore. I continue to do this to declutter. This way i wont be mad at myself for giving away anything or regretting it. It gives me time to decide.
Great idea, thanks.
Yes...boxing stuff up works for me...even seasonal clothing. I look forward to opening the 'summer' clothes box, then wonder why I even hung onto most of it. I should tackle my kitchen again...too many cute cups and glasses!
I noticed as I went along that my “clutter threshold” changed and I came to appreciate more open space and breathing room in my home. That helped me stop bringing things in, and helped me put things away right away. Your brain literally changes. Thanks for this- great advice and I love your place.
Thanks for this insight! Really interesting!
I’m in my 60s and found at one point about 20 years ago I liked seeing space and baseboards. Since then I’ve wondered if I entered a different phase of life, switching from acquiring to create my young adult life to refining and curating the life I’d built.
Ahhh….putting things away right away. This makes me realize that I have so many things that don’t have a home in my house. They sit all over the place! Thank you. I must find them a home or get them out of here!! 🥰🥰
Love this idea! I fell in love with minimalism in 2011, with 5 kids and lots of chaos! I had to give myself permission to move slow with thoughtfulness and intention. One day I would take everything of ONE shelf of my book case, and evaluate each item. Some things I returned to the shelf, or re-homed, or donated. But that one shelf felt beautiful to me when I was finished. I did that for each individual surface in my house over time. Then, one drawer at a time, then one box at a time. Decluttering can be emotional and exhausting, so allow yourself small victories!!! They add up! ❤
True.
Thank you for sharing this. It can feel so overwhelming.
Thank you so much for your comment!
I've been decluttering my home for about 6 months and it feels so good! I found stuff I forgot I had! I have quit shopping and decluttering has taken over that "obsession" to the point I really don't want to shop and waste money on items that won't bring value to me or my home.
I feel the same way. Decluttering helped me find clothes that I was planning on buying, but already had. It's like shopping through your own things. It's great!
Despite the clickbait title, this is the best minimalist video I've seen. It's spot on. Stop bringing stuff in, change your mindset. Contentedism.
At one point I was overcoming a shopping problem. I finally learned to say “I have everything I need today.” That helped me calm down and quit dragging home Stuff. I also take pictures of things I think I want to buy. If the item stays in my head and still looks good in the photo after a week or two has passed, I might consider going back to buy it.
Love this little mantra! Thanks for sharing!
Great idea!
I do that too, with taking the pictures! I do the same with online things, they go on a list and that list gets revisited every now and again, everything I totally forgot about or feels 'meh' gets taken off of it. Delayed buying is a great way to make sure you only get what you really need/like!
i have started saying this too: I have everything I need. I do not want gifts, I do not want more stuff!
I love the mantra, too! And I do that with pictures!
When my uncle died years ago. The whole family had to clear out his house. He had boxes stacked to the roof in his two room house. He had only enough cleared for his bed. It took us a whole weekend with more than 15 family members. I remember my other uncle saying they had no idea he had all this stuff in his house. I noticed all the un opened packages of books and anything else. I took a lot of books and read them. My brother took the old records and sold them. Lots of new clothes my uncle never wore. I thought of how much money he spent on things he never got to use. Till this day I remind my older relatives to start clearing out there belongings. It sounds mean though and I try to say it in a way that remember when we had to clear out uncle's house several years ago. It stays with you when you have to go through all those boxes of their belongings and sadly the life they just boxed up and forgot about.
Thank you so much for sharing. This is such a good reminder.
Thank you for sharing this story. I read this randomly but it really resonated with me. I have a hard time letting go of momentos. The last part you wrote..."the life they just boxed up and forgot about" stuck with me. I go through my things now that I've kept in boxes and think to myself why is this in here where I dont see it, use it or enjoy it. Then I realize that I never really needed it in the first place. So I thank you for your words of wisdom.
There’s a name for that, it’s known as Swedish Death Cleaning. You clean out stuff that you don’t want to leave your family to have to deal with. I’ve heard people say that half of what makes a death so difficult is having to work out what to do with their stuff. I try to remember that. I don’t want to cause a burden to my family if something horrible were to happen.
The same thing happened when my aunt passed away a few years back. She had so much stuff, that it took several trucks to get it out of her house.
My mom always kept what I thought as small things like boxes of cards and letters but when
I’m in the process of getting rid of about 98% of my belongings. The only way for me to do this is moving and super downsizing due to empty nest, poverty and disability. It’s so liberating!! I feel so much joy to give away items that are useful to some one else. I’m keeping a few treasures and will be setting up a minimalist bedroom. My soon to be roommate is very minimalist. It’s exciting.
How’s the move? How was your declutterinf?
"be content with what you have", minimalism explained. You have a good voice. very articulate.
Thank you!!
I agree, I think of it like "to love what it is"
Take photos of before and after. I didn’t think I was decluttering “enough” and I have much more to do but when I look at my “before” photos, I’m impressed at where I am compared to where I was.
That's a great idea!
@Wendy W-B. You're right! Photos do help...puts things in perspective!
I've just done this - the difference is massive. Seriously. I can't believe I lived liked that - no wonder I was so anxious all the time!
For me it helped to start with decluttering. It made me realise how many things I spent money on, that weren't bringing me any happiness. And I felt bad about having to get rid of it. This made me determined to spend a lot less money on buying things, and to create more space for the things that matter to me.
This has been my experience as well!
Good point -- maybe sometimes decluttering can also motivate you to spend less. And it sounds like you've found a system that works for you, which is awesome!
For me things matter most.
no things = no happiness
Your voice is relaxing. Thanks for not yelling at the camera. 💕
I also appreciated the soft tone of voice. 👍
Yes, it was very soothing😌
Exactly
Right. I find so many youtibers scream to the fkn mic. Like chill sis.
Back when I did FB I joined a minimalist group, but these folks seemed so hung up on numbers of items, near empty closets, "capsule wardrobe"... Some were throwing out, or actually burning perfectly good items. To me this was pathological, not minimalism. Never about numbers; it's about simplicity and not letting possessions possess you. Buying that new shirt may give a temporary rush, but you'll only wear one at a time 🙂
interesting insights!!! Thanks for sharing.
Valerie, that group sounds bizarre. Throwing away or burning items that could be donated to the needy seems wasteful.
@@av201 bloody oath. thats disgraceful.
That exactly my experience with FB minimalist groups as well. I used to run a blog as well but have since stopped blogging, left those groups. etc. I focus on my own life and how I want to live without any worry about being a "good minimalist" or anything of that stuff. Traded "Minimalism" for "minimalism".
I agree..won't watch people like that..probably items they have to rebuy
every one starts out as a minimalist when they leave high school and get their first apartment. it is called being poor. but often people look back on their lives when they grow older and remember that that was often the happiest most freeing time of their lives. they did not have much but they felt happy.
lol i needed this- i moved out a couple months ago & brought nothing with me except my bed, dresser, and bookshelf & i keep watching these videos like “i don’t have anything to throw out yet” 😂😂 it’s nice to see how open everything is in this little basement suite, though!
Nailed it
exactly. I'm laughing at these people that think they just had an epiphany moment and figured out the secret of the universe.
Out biggest problem is we buy stuff we don't actually need, either because it looked cute, it was on sale or it is the latest and greatest shinieest model... if we just stop buying stuff we don't actually need, we will all be such better shape...
I never lived in a minimalist home because I already had lots of stuff to bring into that apartment, majority were things I either have gotten as a gift or my mom bought to me, and maybe a little I bought on my own (but naturally didn't buy a lot of stuff myself, as I didn't have my own account and control of those money). When I think of it, my apartment was quite empty in the very beginning when I was still in the process of moving, but that actually made me feel uncomfortable (a lot) in the space and things got much better once I got a few things in and some color. I dont think I prefer any extremely minimalist look. But minimalism as a lifestyle is good for reducing your spending, both saving money and reducing impact on the envirorment
Really useful thank you. I started doing massive decluttering and ended up buying back some items of clothes on eBay after realising I missed them in my wardrobe and they were items I really loved. I got a bit hooked on watching influences and trying to replicate their style rather than realising what truly suited me. X
Such a good insight. It's so easy to get swept up in other people's style--I've definitely done that. Thanks for sharing!
Once you know your style, once you know what is truly becoming in terms of color, pattern, texture, sheen, structure, line - it is incredibly freeing and simplifying. You can walk past nearly everything in the store and pick out the few things that are possibilities, try them on and make a quick decision. Or you know which pattern to pick, which fabrics to pick.
I love how you mentioned accepting the risk that you might get rid of something you want or need... as in: giving yourself permission to make that mistake, that it's part of the process and that it is worth it for the overall peace of mind. That is such a key reframe to be able to get over the "what if" and "maybe I'll decide about this one later... (aka never)"
You're absolutely right. I am 63 and have SO much from relatives passing on and friends buying gifts over the yrs. I have saved items for my sons to save them money like their baby cribs, etc., but they do not want it. Younger ppl want less and less items, not grandma's antique stuff. I browse in shops for something to do, but rarely buy. I just have too much, chipping away at giving away or selling.
My adult kids are Minimalists even though they don’t follow that...I’ve talked with my kids, they are not interested in my stuff. My mom passed away 5 1/2 years ago & I still have barely started to get rid of her things. I’m hoping this spring & summer I will finally start to declutter. I wish I would have started years ago. Realizing I don’t want a lot of things.
“I’m not a perfect minimalist yet.” There’s no such thing as a perfect minimalist. Minimalism is a philosophy and a concept that is ever evolving.
So true 👌
It’s absolute always evolving. Over the years, I have practice this philosophy. It’s never really a constant practice. And things change - your ideas about what makes you happy. ❤️👍🏽
Decluttering comes from Feng Shui its one aspect of it . Simplifying and organizing to have less "yin" which can create illness and more "yang " energy in ones space . Gives you more energy or upliftment .
That its only one aspect . is think minimalists are lazy ones who want to decluttering but not want to understand Fung Shui which is an entire system of placement , colors , lie lines of energy movement that changes. Nasa conducted a study proving 85% based on science Feng Shui works .
Its symbolic what we see we program into our brain subconsciously - art , colors items and their representation to us ; as well as how they energy of the planet is moving ...
Not too mention decluttering .
But I agree its much better to focus on what you do love , want and can use rather then having items that are u need unloved just sitting around .
I think in terms of what I want to create in my home , what I love... I want surrounding me and giving myself permission to have that n let go of the rest
Oh my goodness, I can relate so much to exactly what you're saying .But now I've changed my mindset .I've donated now 60 - 70 % of my clothing and knick knacks ect. ...Yes ! Yes! Yes ! You're 100% correct !
I have more then 30 % in my wardrobe, I buy with more intentionality now.
I've come to minimalism gradually over about 10 years, during which I moved house 10 times. Each move involved packing things away and making a conscious decision that I wanted this object to stay in my life and that it was worth the time and energy of moving it. This, coupled with becoming more environmentally conscious (and therefore feeling guilty every time I threw something out) caused me to really consider every purchase and think about "if the time comes when I need to throw this out (e.g. if it breaks and isn't fixable), what impact will it have on the environment?" My partner and I have just moved into our first owned home, and many people were surprised with how quick and simple and stress free the move was because we just didn't have a lot to move (genuinely didn't start packing until the day of the move). In addition, we both work full time and comfortably save about half of our joint income, which meant we were able to increase our deposit and so afford the home we bought, and has also meant that 6 months after spending almost all our money on buying the house, we've now saved enough for a pretty decent wedding.
Have you thought of doing a blog or channel? I love your philosophy on minimalism.
If a room is making you crazy, empty it. Then put back your favorites until it feels right. Get rid of as many of those leftovers as you can.then pack up the few pieces that your unsure of. Put them in garage or basement or wherever. If you get through the year. You can get rid of those too.
Good advice!
holy crap...i SO wanna do this!! its sooo clever!!
This hit it for me. I believe this will definitely be the cure for my overwhelming closet. I have way too much but find it so hard to just get rid of most of it. This will be a great way to determine if it returns back to the closet or gets donated or given away after a year. I’m certain i won’t even think about it after a year. Thanks for sharing this 👍🏽👍🏽
I tend to agree, I did the same thing I started downsizing prior to changing my mindset then got frustrated when it felt like nothing was changing. But when I took a step back and took a long hard look at how I viewed my possessions my perspective changed. In this life you can either own your stuff or your stuff can own you. Are you working a job you hate to buy stuff you don't really need to impress people you really don't like. That was me for years, no matter how much stuff I bought it wasn't enough, I had to have the latest toy the newest gadget, I would prowl the internet for what was coming out and how it would change my life. Then something happened that made me realize that the insanity had to stop. I lost both of my parents in under a year with two households I had to sort out go through and figure out what to do with all their stuff. That is truly an eye opener, when you are surrounded by chaos and insanity while your heart is breaking and having to make long term decisions on what to keep and what to get rid of. I think of those as the darkest days of my life but also the beginning of a new mindset. I realized when I die I don't want to leave this chaos for my loved ones to deal with. They are going to have enough emotional baggage to wrestle when I am gone. Which also leads to a more profound am I truly happy conversation and what needs to change to make that statement true. I think we all get to a point in our lives when we realize that we are no more than a hamster on an exercise wheel unless we figure out how to stop spinning and start moving towards our goals. And we often have to adjust our perspective and our actions to match our goals if we ever dream of obtaining them. When I changed my mindset on shopping the rest became much easier. Now if I shop it is with purpose. It is to replace something I wore out and I do allow myself to try something new occasionally but I usually limit that to one item per 3 months to give me time to truly try it and see if it fits me personally and my own unique style before deciding it if is a long term addition to my life. I went from having to have two closets full of clothes I never wore to half a closet that everything in it I love and when I fall out of love with them, they are donated to a woman's shelter to help others with a fresh start in their own lives. I used to have an entire wall of shoes but realized I had most of them because they were pretty but not very functional or comfortable. Now I only invest in shoes I will truly wear or use on a regular basis. Do I have my one or two pair of I love these I just don't wear, yes of course but it brings me joy and the memories involved in those pieces justify their space in my home. Being a minimalist isn't just about owning less stuff it is about the thought and care you take with the items you have in your life. It is also about streamlining the decisions you must face on a daily basis so that you can concentrate on what is truly important, you happiness and joy in this world. Think about it, If you take one year of your life how much time does it take every day to pick out an outfit for the day, if you took that time and combined it for a week how much time could you have saved? How about month or a year? If you put all those chunks of time together that you don't spend searching for an item lost in the chaos or having to second guess what you look good in what else could you accomplish with your time? We all complain we don't have enough time and that becomes more and more evident the older we get. That is why I try to be a minimalist. It saves me time and stress because I am no longer sweating the stupid stuff, I am no longer searching for what I need in chaos and I am no longer fighting for a moment to sit back and enjoy my life because I am no longer working to buy stuff I don't need to impress people I don't like and I have for the first time in my life gotten my priorities straight and my life in some sort of order.
Brilliantly said!! 👏🏼👏🏼 So glad you discovered what really brought you peace. I came to the same discovery when we would go camping in our RV with almost none of our belongings and yet the most peaceful and freeing feeling every time, not missing any of our stuff at home. Then we had to move to the other side of the world and were only able to take 25% of our belongings with us; after going through the painful and time consuming process of selling and/or donating 50% of our stuff and putting the other 25% in storage (much of which I quickly forgot about anyway) - I decided it just wasn't worth it to have so much stuff. I never want to feel prisoner to excess stuff again.
Thank you for taking the time to share. Felt that!
Some years ago we moved to a smaller house and I got rid of a lot of stuff and have never missed any of it EXCEPT for my books. Be careful getting rid of your books! I had thought if I ever wanted to re-read a certain title I could just check it out from the library --- not true! Books are my friends, and a lot of my favorite ones are old and have been out of print a long time, and many libraries have done their own de-cluttering and tossed them. Sometimes you can't even get it on WorldCat, and to buy a used copy is prohibitively expensive. I wish I still had my books that I got rid of.
Agree, I'm just going to pass on the airport books and keep the classics that I like to re-read and search the charity shops, when they open again!
Very true, you will know how much you love it when you keep rereading it just for joy!
I found that not going into the stores helped me. Now I order things online (it's mindful shopping- no more impulse buying) and do grocery pickup (where I order groceries from my AP and pick them up from the store) has stopped so much impulse and recreational buying. Now that less stuff is coming into the house, I can keep on top of things.
So smart to figure out what specific ways of shopping leave a person less vulnerable to impulse buying. It's so true, if we affect our environment, we're more likely to have success. Thanks for the comment!
I got really interested into minimalism in 2019. And for the past 1.5 years I have decided not to buy any stuff and have been enjoying the ones I own. I felt this is the actual way of minimalism just like what you have thought. My plan is to use everything I own completely and then buy new ones only if I need one. Actually, I have felt a lot happier with this method. I would have hated and spent a lot if I had done decluttering and bought new stuffs.
Same here! I am "using up" everything I already have and not buying anything new until the old is used up. Some things I really don't use I will sell or donate. I also think that if I "force declutter" all my clothes, I'll end up buying new ones. Because it's nice to have that variety, even if some things I rarely ever wear. Now I feel like I have one item of everything I might like to wear, so I don't feel an urge to go shopping. And by slowly using up what I have, I may slowly thin out my wardrobe and get used to that anyway. Letting the minimalism sneak in if it wants to...
Agree. I actually was decluttering and sending things to sell and it was “hurting” and instead stopped that and started my three month no buy and enjoy what I have. So very similar to what you’re saying.
That's awesome! A 3-month no-buy is impressive :)
@Greyson Francis good luck!! When I was tempted I started writing in a journal... why I wanting the thing-with details, followed by why I had committed not to and where that money could go.
@@ElinLesser thank you!
@@ElinLesser thank you!
@@ElinLesser thank you!
I love the focus on being content with what we have! That's such a good reminder. Thank you so much.
I totally had to tell my neighbors and family “I can’t take any free gifts right now, I’m decluttering for my mental health!” Sometimes people don’t get it, and they kept trying to give me stuff they thought I needed. I just needed them to understand that my cup runneth over already. I don’t want anymore!✌️😄
We had a friend who kept giving us stuff a couple of years ago which neither of us really wanted. In addition to not wanting it because you have enough already, it's usually (in my opinion), ugly stuff. I feel bad for rejecting it in some ways because it's nice to give folks stuff but it's only a burden if people don't want it or don't like it. Many years ago we had a neighbour give us a lawn mower on the basis that they didn't have room for it at their house and she wouldn't listen to me when I told her we didn't have room for it either (at the time we were in a flat which only really has two rooms - a bedroom and a living room combined kitchen, in addition to the bathroom and a narrow hallway. We ended up leaving it in the garden because I got fed up of moving it when I wanted to shower and it got stolen. Then there are others who dump unwanted furniture on you - they would be better donating it to a charity if they want to get rid of stuff than offloading it on friends and neighbours.
Just found your channel while clearing out my 1k+ long "watch later" playlist and love it! Mindset is really so much more important than technique. Once you get your mindset straight and know why you're doing it, the how becomes almost self evident.
Girl your so on point with wanting to buy more after decluttering, I’ve gotten trapped in this mindset of buying after getting rid of things. Glad to know that we can change our mindset to not need to keep bringing excess things into our life.
i think the hardest thing about minimalism is tackling the mindset that comes from poverty. when you're poor it's harder to let go of something because you have no idea if you'll ever have the money to buy it again if you ever find yourself needing it. we don't always get nice things so we hold on a little too tightly to the things we do have. i also think its easier for someone feel justified being a hoarder when a lot of things were free/on sale. even if you find yourself coming into some money its hard to shake that scarcity mindset. untreated anxiety, depression, and other mental illnesses add a lot to this as well
That is probably the most important factor in this. A lot of these online "minimalists" obviously have a high enough income to replace things if they need them. A lot of people won't have that flexibility.
@@jackiehamilton2738 yea for sure. plus they have the money to invest up front in higher quality items that wont need frequent replacement. alot of us have to just settle with what we can afford which often means things that will eventually fall apart on us
For real. Had struggled for a long time and even had a disease that eventually took me out of working. One income family and we decided to homeschool. My homeschool is minimalist but that actually means I have a full library of books and we use paper, pencil and books and every kids uses the same books eventually, I even print my own books. But minimalist in this area for us means packed bookshelves. I spend thousands less than my friends who homeschool and every year they might only have a stack of workbooks per kid and not need all the storage we do. But I own everything k-12 in all subjects and reusable. For years my weight changed from my illness and I had bags and bags if clothes because I got rid of Nothing because I had no money for clothes. I take hand me downs and mostly wore clothes from my grandmother. Ppl made fun of me at 30 dressed like a grandma but really I didn't care I had nice skirts for free that didn't fall off me. I'm learning to let go of things I really don't need and find my stability more in my marriage than in things I cling to. We talk of downsizing but the books are a none negotiable
I have a hard time stopping the incoming stuff. I am constantly getting rid of stuff but I do feel like I’m replacing those items so it seems like my inventory hasn’t changed. I love the way you worded it! Thank you!
Yeah, it's definitely a challenge! I'm with you! And thank you!
I really love your perspective! You’re a smart, independent thinker! Not one minimalist (and I’ve been watching and reading them for a decade) has EVER shared this perspective before. Thank you!
I unknowingly started minimalism journey by changing my habits. I was learning about if for years and I always thought that it's crazy to live like that. Until I realized that the crazy one is me, with my shopaholism and hoarding tendencies. So I started by buying less and using what I already have (cosmetics) and organizing, because I wasn't ready to declutter and let go of my stuff. Then I read Marie Kondo book and I felt like I can do it and I did. I declutter using her method, change my habits even more and now minimalism is my reality. It took me 7 years to get to this point, but it was so worth it.
"Don't collect. Change your mindset." - Loved this video!!! Thank you for making it!
I recently tossed/donated every clothing item I didn’t wear and also the ones that didn’t fit well. And made the investments i needed to do in order to gain a better wardrobe without being overwhelmed by the amount i own. I’m glad and happy i did it so mindful. ☺️
I lived in a tent for a couple of years...talk about minimalism!!!
Then I moved into a refurbished Garage for 13 years and accumulated "ALOT" of stuff
Now I'm in a small house and when I moved I down sized so much that my dwelling place was empty...hollow....devoid of any personality at all. It had no character without "MY" handprint, heartprint, headprint.....I hadn't put "MY" mark on the space; the things that bring me joy and tell others who I am through my life space.
After 2.5 years I've found some balance between what I had in the Garage, and what I had when I first moved where I am now.
I added lots of fabrics in many textures, colors and styles....I love changing my environment often, and fabrics are perfect in a rental. I added back some basic furniture...like storage pieces for my supplies that I use in my publishing business. I am not a minimalist...but I do like order and efficiency....I edit my space quite often, and I'm constantly playing with the contents of my home. I'm an aesthetic artist and home maker...so I enjoy the process of displaying my passions, but not just random collections. Everything has substance and usually "works" in my space...nothing is simply pretty to look at...it has to function as something too...be useful to the whole system in many ways.
My definition of minimalism is to have just enough in my possession that I'm living in pure love and joy....I want to feel "full" because the pieces are rich in color, texture, flavor, aroma, sound...all my senses are stimulated on a regular basis, because I have some sense of emotion about my belongings. Home making is a beautiful balance between the pragmatic/practical and the warm/comfortable/beautiful. Every person has their own perceptions of what that means, and if you "LOVE" an empty house...then have it.
But I don't think we need to define Minimalism as just ONE way of living....Perception & Emotion define things in many ways.
I do like the practice of having less and I am doing a lot of decluttering. I stop going with the flow tho in some of the kitchen things. I like my red keurig coffee machine to sit out. I like my red salt and pepper shaker to sit on the counter. I like my air fryer/toaster oven to stay on the counter as it gets used multiple times a day by my family with two sons who eat at other than regular meal times. I like a bowl on my dining table with my table runner. I think you should get it to where you feel comfortable, easier to clean but still decorated with what you like.🤗
Such good insights! We all need to figure out that balance that works for us. Thanks for sharing!
Very true!! 👏🏼 As much as I love the look of a sparse kitchen, I love having what I need, where I need it, when I need it - even more. Not only do I not have much cabinet space but my family uses things like our Keurig and toaster several times per day, not practical for us to be putting that away after each use just to have a minimalist look. Love the idea of to each their own, instead of one cookie cutter way of doing "minimalism".
So true - I love my gracefully curving Saladmaster machine, a manual slicer-shredder tool, right on my kitchen counter for making short work of vegetables as I fix dinner. It’s like a work of art that’s functional, it doesn’t have any ugly wires sticking out. Depending on the produce I have on hand, it’s either sitting in a graceful wooden bowl or basket on the kitchen counter, ready to go. Right now, I love my arrangement of aloe vera in a pale green ceramic pot and some pussy willow in a small curved white vase and some aqua candles as my kitchen table centerpiece arrangement. The absence of other clutter makes it a fun ritual to just mess with a couple of things and indulge in a little artistic home keeping.
I love your take on minimalism! To be content is where we should start. Then start decluttering and be mindful of what you keep. Love it!
Absolutely agree! There is no right or wrong way to "do" minimalism. I strive for living an intentional life with my children and myself. Keeping only things that bring me happiness and value. I got so tired of the stigma that you can only have 5 things in order to be a "real" minimalist. Thanks for bringing this conversation to the table- it's so important for people to hear!
This was fascinating insight, because I'm a maximalist. And I also live with gratitude. Over half of my furnishings I have found on the streets of my city, and I have gratitude for each and every item. They all bring me joy and comfort.
So your an opportunist and hoarder , i think most of us get to point when enough is enough , especially if things turn into clutter and don’t get used and become dust collectors, at that point decisions should be made i really think, I’m getting rid of so many things , just thinking about makes me feel better .
@@fishmut being a maximalist doesn't mean hoarding. Sounds like you have some personal baggage to declutter.
@@fishmut as someone who was once a maximalist and is now a minimalist, that doesn’t automatically mean hoarder. hoarding- a persistent difficulty discarding or parting with possessions because of a perceived need to save them. maximalism- a style or technique that embraces excess and extravagance. do research
So many comments in such a short time! I'm a 68 yr. old man living in a ~250 sq. ft. senior apt. Known I've needed to "clean house" for a long time. Feeling on the brink of jumping off that cliff. Thanks for your videos. Also absorbing experience from the "Nomadland" folks. ---- On the cusp of change, I think.
Go for it! (:
That thing about gratitude is so wise! I heard something similar from Marie Kondo, who said something like “of course your screwdriver doesn’t fill you with joy, but if it works, you can be grateful to it and so you should keep it” (ok, she didn’t say that, but something along those lines). This also reminded me of a challenge Debt Kicking Mom does, when she doesn’t buy new stuff (for financial reasons,not so much minimalism), but tries to find new appreciation for the things she has.
Living your life with a minimalist approach is a mindset, it has nothing to do with the physical stuff. Physical stuff is just energy. As soon as you are in your right mindset, the wrong stuff will disappear, and good energy will appear. And then the strength to say no thanks when it's needed. Hiking alone for 2 months taught me a lot about me being enough and living with only is on my back. Great video Elin!
Everything same for me. I had to slowly discover for myself that nothing was going to change until I stopped WANTING things, shopping, etc. I wish someone had told me!
Glad I'm not alone! :)
@@ElinLesser why is this aspect rarely ever talked about I wonder?
Thanks for a great video!!! I knew something had to change when every time we moved (which was often for a while), we LOVED the feeling of the empty new house before all our stuff arrived, more than having our belongings with us. It was always such a light and stress-free feeling (sleeping on air mattresses, eating on the floor and playing card games), without our creature comforts and luxuries.
I really like your honesty about your journey! I am on my on journey and it isn't easy, but I won't give up!
You got this! (And thanks!)
Thank goodness l found you! Thank you for no babbling, giggling, and repeating yourself. Thank you for not wasting my time with a bunch of nonsense.
I am anxious to watch more of your videos.
This was such a clear and thought out video! I've started with my highest 'turnover' areas - my beauty products. I feel that if I can develop a minimalist mindset there then I can apply that to other spaces. I've been filming my no buy progress and tracking my empties so I can look back over this year and truly reflect. I think minimalism is quite a slow process - something people seem to rush and then regret,
Thank you!
Just checked out your channel -- subscribed and love it! Totally agree -- it's a slow process!
@@ElinLesser thank you for checking out my channel! I really enjoyed this video - I’ve just watched it again to really take it on board :)
the one thing i felt i should invest in after getting rid of so much, was a good bag. i wasn’t truly happy with any of the purses i had, and i use one daily. i sold some, donated others, and then invested in one i knew i would continue to use for as long as it would last me.
I guess I am the weird one who has "missed" some of the things I threw out while decluttering. However, I have never missed them so much that I had to re-buy them. I am more aware of what I own now and have been able to find substitutes around the house. (which is almost kind of fun 😊)
I totally think that can happen -- missing things... but that's a good point that the missing didn't outweigh the other payoffs (or at least it sounds like that!)
I miss books the most.
@@Amy12358 I have gone down the road of one book in and one out, this way I keep books and don't overload my shelves but am quite choosy of what I buy. I have a book basket of books borrowed, to read and if this is full no more books are borrowed and I need to read ;-) best wishes to you
I have really only missed books. I thought I could get them at the library and sadly, they were no longer there.
@@jossykerflossy915and @Amy- I feel the same way about books. And seriously, anyone who loves reading their books could have a hard time with the one book in/one book out method. I literally sold for pennies or donated 50 boxes of books, and I have missed a number of them. And no, they are not available at the library. And since the pandemic, they want an appointment to go to the library. At least say will take book orders over the phone and gather them from the different branches for pick up. But that’s not the same as browsing and touching and feeling the books. I still have more than I physically want to care for, (i’m thinking about how all of the bookshelves have to be emptied and moved for new carpet to go in), but… I miss some of my old friends. And due to a pipe burst, some of those bookcases had to be emptied, with boxes of books and bookshelves moved down into the hallway. It’s feeling a bit cluttered right now.
Wow, I am only 1/2 way through this video n you, my dear, have rang a tower bell in my head. I don’t know your name n hav NEVER seen any of your videos but you have already impacted my vision of my problem in “decluttering” - “organizing”. - “cleaning” or whatever I want to call it. Reducing/spending/enjoying/ being thankful for all the blessing our family has. Thank you. Why are we never satisfied with what we have?
This is my new attitudes. I am a very fortunate women and so blessed. Things do NOT GIVE ME PLEASURE. Actually, lol, they give me stress! Crazy, that’s y I’m watching your video.
TRYING TO FIGURE OUT HOW TO GET RID OF (. . ). THANK YOU, you are a very wise young women ❤
Something I realized in flipping my mindset is instead of seeing it as 'letting things go', I decided to ONLY keep the things I wanted ..in my various spaces. Then you really LOVE everything you decided to keep.
I am in the process of decluttering and so far your advice on stopping first the influx of new things makes so much sense. Thanks for your tips! It helped a lot 😊
So true ❤️ I started minimalism 10 years ago with a year of not expending on anything but necessities. That changed my way of thinking about wanting < needing. I really think that minimalism is a state of mind to want to simplify your life in every single one.
Influencer minimalists are just competing over who can have the least quantity of stuff. Minimalism is not a number
The final countdown.
The correct number is 3 black t-shirts and 13 houseplants. HAHA just kidding.
Also, influencer minimalism isn't minimalist, it's an aesthetic. Who can get the most wooden items and stone plates. Basically influencer minimalism is actually elite consumerism.
@@marlorenee4193 this entirely!xx
@@rebeccaparsons2482 lol!
Ive given away over 3k books before i moved and another 1k to downsize and move again. Still going through more and donated another 1k since ive lived here. All the previous books i never got to read. I used to live in a 5 bedroom home, now in a 1 bedroom apartment thats full. Ive donated 3/4 of everything. No longer have a bed set, no couch or entertainment center. All the big furniture is gone. I only wish i had all the wasted money back for unneeded items. The reason i got rid of big items is if i can't move them by myself then they are history. Ive been disabled so thats the other reason. Actually wanted to declutter and not leave a mess to younger family members when i die. Years ago i gave to family. 2 years ago gave more to family. Now this year i boxed up 20 more boxes to give to family. Been donating much more again. Sold a few items, not much since no one is willing to pay for brand new in the box items. From a 5 bedroom to a 1 is very difficult, even the last ex took things i owned before i met them. Believe me im still struggling. I dont have much income to buy more yet it seems the more i dig out to give away the more i have. Its never ending. You wouldn't believe it, but i donated 55 lawn bags of clothes in the last 15 years. Half these clothes were never worn, too small now. I keep moving it out and still have plenty. I try to think back and wonder when i had so much time to buy all these things and clothes, most were bought from 15 to 25 years ago. I do regret things that have been stolen and some given away, would like them back since i cant afford to replace them. Some day i may be forced out of this place then the book shelves go, the kitchen table and chairs and microwave with stand. Its getting down to bare necessities. Ill be left with all folding furniture. Im not happy where inflation is going. Rent went up twice since ive been here. One more time and i may be booted to the curb not able to afford any place. Id rather live in my truck than a rat or bug infested part of a city.
This is such a brilliant video - its nice to hear a new perspective on this as someone who is also struggling with this. Thank you for this.
This is such an insightful video! I’m glad you talk about how everyone’s journeys are different, I can’t agree more! I’m beginning my minimalism journey and haven’t had access to my things (I’ve been quarantined out of the country for the last year) and it has really changed my mindset and I can’t wait to return and apply what I’ve learned to ALL of my things. I really enjoy your videos, thank you for sharing your journey :)
Wow, I'm sure that will be an interesting process returning to your stuff. And thank you so much!!
Yes!! You could not have explained minimalism any better. The change of mindset has to come first and is at the heart of minimalism. I trained myself to reflect before I buy: "Do I need this?" or "Do I want this?" Also, just because something is beautiful, cute, or could be worth money one day doesn't mean I need to buy it. I love how airy and cozy my home feels. My nighttime routine is so much easier and waking up to a clean, straighten up home allows me to drink some tea and listen to my sermons without being distracted about things I need to get done before my kids wake up. It is a huge blessing. I'm not the perfect "minimalist" but I found that I am more content with less. :) By the way, your kitchen is absolutely gorgeous!!
I find that not enough minimalist influencers don't talk about this trap that when you have decluttered it can feel tempting to buy a new piece to fill up that empty space ! Thank you for reminding me of that! 😊
I love the editing of your videos!
I found what you said about gratitude for what you already have & not buying MORE new things especially valuable.
Whoever reads this just remember there is NO such thing as a perfect minimalist. Minimalism is finding what works best for YOU! Thank you for making content Slice of Light!
Thank you for this thoughtful comment! You are so right -- no such thing as perfect minimalism! :)
"...focusing on what you are enjoying now rather than the future and what could be better" Excellent takeaway!
I would also add that being able to let go of who you were and what your interests were in the past is a great help too. I have found in my minimalism journey that I hang onto things longer than I really want to "just in case" my interest for something is sparked again. I know I go through phases, but also there comes a time when I realize that I probably am NOT going to take up a particular hobby again and it is time to part ways. In truth, if I DO want to take it up again or read a book again or whatever, I am content with the idea that I may spend money on some supplies again, but that is a lower price for me to pay than having those things take up space in my life when they serve me no purpose for possibly years!
Absolutely!! I heard the phase called ‘fantasy self’ I had projects I was going to do when I retired lol nope!! Not happening, different interests now and minimalism IS the best way forward for peace and joy for me 😊
Good points! Change your mindset. I seem to be able to get rid of everyone else’s stuff but still have challenges saying goodbye to my own!!!
I totally agree....STOP the buying and STOP things coming into the house (my life), then declutter and declutter ruthlessly ! :) freedom from clutter=peace of mind.
yes!
Yes! I've ripped stuff away from myself for various reasons, and I litterally have more stuff now, but not the several things I miss.
I love what you said about enjoying what you have, and being mindful. It is 5 years for me now, and I appreciate and love everything I have, the less you have the more you love what you do have...
To be honest all I have donated & sold, I haven’t thought of one thing since it is gone,
Thanks for sharing -- I think it's so good for people (and me) to hear that -- that you don't regret a single declutter!
Same here. I've given away a lot of really nice stuff over the past ten years, and don't miss it. (:
@@melissakalloway1916it really is amazing, how once it’s gone it’s gone, and never think about it
A game changer for me toward minimalism was Marie kondo " THE ART OF TIDYING UP" instead of decluttering by room declutter by category. Keep what gives you joy
I wish people would just stop with telling others they have to be extreme minimalism. If you love something then keep it and stop telling others that they should get rid of everything. Everyones idea of a peaceful home is different.myself i hate clutter but love a warm inviteing space. Someone else may love and empty room. I believe it is wrong for influencers to tell everyone they can only be happy if they live this lufe. The oranganal meaning was not a completely spare empty space.
Your wish is granted......stop watching you tube videos on minimalism.
@@Jana0821 not all minimalist are telling others they have to fit in there nitch. Dont worry i wont bother with this one again
Thank you!!! I totally agree. I've stopped watching a long time ago
@@freedomisthechoicesyoumake8594 😌
Minimalism is natural and fine for some people. But, more than likely overall it’s a scam. A way to get people to get rid of everything so in a few years maximalism will be back in style and then folks buy all over again. Not saying the content creators are aware of this. I’m sure most are being honest. But, fashion, whether home or clothing is a trap. Just like they change up colors, shapes, styles often. This is to keep us dissatisfied and consuming.
Me personally, I’m not either. I’m a middleist! Lol! I try not to fall into the whole buy, buy, buy, trap but also feel more comfortable with a few more items around. Honestly, we do need to spend a lot less time on RUclips, Pinterest, Instagram and the like. These all make people yearn for something different or something more. For me I just want to enjoy the days simply, enjoy living my real life, not some Facebook one! Being thankful for each day cause we only get one go round!
This is the first video I have watched on your channel, and I have to say that this is the best and most satisfying video I've watched in quite a while. I love your style and how you format your videos; keep it up!!
Absolutely. If you are buying all the time, it's counter productive. I am trying to pair down my stuff so I can appreciate what I really like to have out. I hear and agree with your approach.
Your video is so helpful!!! I never felt like my de-cluttering was effective enough. I now know why--I’m still trying to hold on to too much stuff. Most of the time, I don’t even know that stuff, especially clothes, is there. I’m seriously going to keep only the things that I wear or use regularly. Everything else will be a blessing for someone else.
You are absolutely right in your analysis! I did some declutter first a massive one for books as I had books lining everywall of my spare bedroom, it became overwhelming! I decluttered also a lot of clothes as I was finding my "style" and getting rid of the ones I hardly wore! But I was still buying clothes as I shop 2nd hand and it is often very cheap! So now I have to stop going thrifting and accumulating! The pandemy helped!!! I am definitely going to shop more intentionally and stop the flow in!!!
Awesome! Also glad that others are having similar experiences to what I've had -- makes me feel not alone! :)
Good point about gratitude and appreciating what you already have. This is a POWERFUL tool. 👍
Thankyou for sharing! Some nice tips! I personally am still on my minimalism journey. I started with trying to buy less and appreciate what I already have. I now keep a list of the things that I buy (with this I mean objects like clothing, plates, cups, plants etcetera) and so far I have only bought a couple of things which most of them I really needed them. This list makes me think twice about what I might want to buy because at the end of the year I dont want to have an huge list.
SO smart to keep a list! Keeps it intentional. Thanks for sharing!
I am 100% agree with you !! Let's do the minimalism base on our own style/way, because each of us having different kind of clutters problem, what works to other doesn't mean match to solve our problem
I completely agree with you that decluttering or purging doesn't do much if we don't makes changes to aquire less. I've taken steps to aquire less, but still have a lot to go though in the purging process.
Yeah, it definitely takes a while! I kind of think maybe it just becomes a habit rather than a final destination--I'm working at it, too. :) Thanks for sharing!
It took me 8 months, but I am so glad I found this video! I have been asking myself all of those questions for 2 years. I have decluttered so many times and struggle with changing the way I shop and manage my time, so nothing has changed long term! I am ready to put this all into practice!
Great video. I'd add that we need to face the reasons WHY we are compelled to constantly buy stuff we do not need (and sometimes, don't even really want). Until we face those reasons and patterns, we will just repeat the cycle: purge/buy/guilt-chaos/purge/buy etc. ad infinitum.
Yes!!! 👏🏼👏🏼
Loved your video! Especially the thought that every item you are looking at is reminding you to do something about it, take care of it, repair it, dust it... that’s so true and exactly what I’ve discovered as well. Such a thoughtful way to approach the topic of minimalism!
I started my journey to minimalism recently. I’m starting simply by whenever I go shopping before I check out an item I ask myself a couple times “am I actually ever gonna wear this” or “how often am I gonna wear it”. It’s really tempting to get more things but it’s help me a lot
Best advice on minimalism that I’ve heard so far! Thank you! Looking forward to more of your videos.
Thank you!!
"a deep contentment" Yes!
Fairyland Cottage is a good channel for slow, content living.
Awesome video. I'm so glad I found your channel. I just happen to already be doing it this way because I bought the book "goodbye things" and he blew my mind about WHYYYYY I was gathering. It stopped me dead in my tracks and I was able to be way more intentional about any item I picked up that wasn't in my possession that I was thinking of acquiring. When I stopped caring about impressing others which he talks about, I was able to vastly stop acquiring. I love the "enjoy what you have" thanks for this vid. By the way, you are soooooo pretty and your hair color is soooooo pretty. : )
I love your entire concept of just seeing the value and how our current items serve us!
So glad!
This makes a lot of sense - I have also done the exact same thing - decluttering a ton but not getting rid of the on the fence items and lots of new stuff always coming in
Your videos have truly inspired me! Thank you for creating such wonderful content and I look forward to supporting you and seeing your channel grow! Congrats on over 1,000 subscribers! 🌼
Oh my goodness thank you so much! Made my day! :)
I did exactly what you said, decluttered my wardrobe and bought more! My mindset isn't correct Yet! So I understand how important 😌 mindset is...thanks 😊
If I just declutter my space I won't maintain it unless I have an organizational system in place. I agree that you have to really concentrate on not "replacing" the items you get rid of with other items. It's very tempting to fill that space back up with new clutter.
Good point - some organization is important too. Thanks for the comment! :)
After the unexpected passing of my husband I am overwhelmed by decluttering. Not only am I trying to let go of his things, I have an attic full of inherited sentimental boxes. I appreciate your grace of understanding it can be quite difficult. I do believe I need someone to help me. I'm not young & simply making boxes for donation I have to have help getting them down stairs. I just subscribed to your channel & look forward to your soothing voice. 😊
I'm sorry, Catherine. How painful. Do a little bit for five days out of the week. Break over the weekend and pick it up again on Monday. Ask yourself 'is there anyone who would want this'? 'Do "I" still want it, or am I keeping it out of guilt'? If you think any of your things have value, some on here have mentioned using an auctioneer. Only make sure a trusted family member or friend is with you when the evaluation takes place.
@@melissakalloway1916, thank you for your condolences. I have been trying to think of special people who may like this or that. I have much that I have found to be valuable. I've been watching Dr. Lori on RUclips & she is helping tremendously. I want to simply give everything away. However, I could use the $$ to make repairs on my home. Lots to be done. Haven't even gotten up in my attic yet. 🙃 Thank God for the friends/neighbors who are more than willing to help me. I have to be very patient. They have family, homes & jobs of their own. But, if something happens they will drop everything to come to my aid. I love them so much. ❤️✌️
There´s the real minimalism: being intentional about what we buy and what we keep, and then there's the social media version: wearing the same t-shirt for one year, confusing "minimalist homes" with nicely decorated homes, presenting the idea that to be a true minimalist you should purchase more stuff to help you in your journey (a smartwatch, an expensive notebook for your journaling, an expensive laptop for posting on social media about how you've changed your lifestyle).
SUCH a good point. :)
Look at the Amish if you want to see minimalism.They don't seem to have anything thats not necessary, no extra pieces of furniture, clothing, no gadgets, kids don't have ten tons of toys each, minimalist homes are so much easier to clean and of course its easier to find things and that cuts out a lot of frustration especially when you have kids that are always misplacing things.
So glad I saw this video! Thank you for sharing your experience and your thoughts. I have been decluttering for a few years now and I would tell people that I am a minimalist but my spending habits did not change. Esp recently while I am going through stressful times, I noticed I look at the websites of my favorite brands more often and end up buying random things I like but don’t need right away. I knew I wasn’t truly embodying minimalism so I started to seek out videos/books about minimalism again and saw your video. This helped me a lot! Thank you so much.
Thank you so much for your advice ✨ This will definitely help guide me towards a more minimalist life
I'm so glad! Thank you and best of luck! :)
I love this. I think you really hit the nail on the head about how people are doing minimalism backwards by simply decluttering. Love what you said about mindfulness and the stuff you already have (aha moment!). What has helped me the most with not collecting stuff was focusing on reducing waste for the environment... that has been my major mind shift.