I am on a three year journey to continue minimizing my
possessions. That is the time I've
allotted for myself as my youngest finishes up high school and heads off to
college. Hard to believe that we are
nearing that phase of life already, but it is rapidly approaching.
This pile has all been purged and combined into the one black binder |
We continue to go through our things and select the items
that are meaningful and useful. The rest
we are letting go. Since we have the
luxury of time right now we are placing some of these items up for sale while
the rest is bagged up and headed off to be donated. As we work we are also purging papers and
organizing the paperwork for long term storage.
So far I have the important papers tucked away in a binder and one large
expandable envelope. I've pretty much
let the rest go.
Once again I find myself amassing a collection of empty
storage bins our in our garage. We'll be
using those to organize and eventually pack up items for moving, whether it is
to a dorm room, an apartment or a new home down the road is yet to be determined. So for now I am stacking them up until I know
for sure. I've made a tremendous amount
of progress over the years and still have much to do. Especially with what is now stored in our
garage. I'll be focusing a lot on
clearing out that space this summer. It
is long past due and I'm beyond ready to get it done.
Minimizing our possessions as been a very freeing and
liberating process, although it can also be rather emotional at times too. Sentimental items are definitely the most
difficult to part with, but I'm rather proud that I've been able to part with
quite a bit of that as well. Along with
tackling the emotional side of minimizing I find the liberating part to be even
more empowering and far more enjoyable.
I feel as though I can breathe better and I am much less stressed by having
fewer material possessions.
The bonus to having less stuff has been that I have more
time available and I work around the house a lot less. Our evenings and weekends used evolve around
chores, housework and managing our stuff.
We don't do that anymore. It is
much easier now to keep things clean, neat and tidy. What we have left is now organized and
functional. We are better able to use
our home and it is much more enjoyable to be in. I spend far less time cleaning and
maintaining our home and it stays that way.
I no longer feel panicked about company coming, or heaven forbid,
unexpected guests arriving. Our home is
always company ready.
Any items we bring into the house are coming in with
intention and thoughtfulness. Thankfully
the days of impulse shopping are long behind us, not that I was much of an
impulse shopper, but I did have my moments on occasion. Now I don't want to bring in anything into
our home we don't need or won't use so a lot of thought goes into each purchase
before it is made. I like that. Better decisions make for better actions.
Money saved is another result of minimizing. We need less, we want less, therefore we buy
less. We have less therefore we spend
less to take care of and maintain our things.
Because we aren't overwhelmed by the sheer volume of our stuff we are
able to be more clear minded about how to take care of our possessions and since
we have more time available we are able to do most of our maintenance ourselves
rather than needing to hire it done.
Minimizing our possessions down to what is most important to
us has been a very positive and life changing experience. I have yet to meet anyone who has gone
through the same experience tell me "Oh, I wish I hadn't done
that." Quite the opposite. Like me, they wish they had started minimizing
much sooner.
The key to successful minimizing is to maintain it and so
far we have done that and we will continue to do so. Nowadays I find myself looking around on a
regular basis and thinking "What can I get rid of?" or "Do I
need this anymore?" I even find
myself doing this at work.
What are your thoughts on minimizing?
We went all in about 25y ago when we recarpeted our entire home. We asked the installers to divide our home in half. We emptied half into the garage, they laid new carpet. We then spent a few days going through every single item and consciously deciding what came back in. We made many many trips to the Idaho Youth Ranch. We then did the same for the other half of the house. It felt sooooo good!
ReplyDeleteSince then, I've kept a box in the corner of the spare room. When I see something that I cannot remember using "the last time", in the box it goes. When the box is full, off to the IYR. This has served us well. Last month I went on a bender and removed everything from our coat closet and the 2 drawers of my nightstand. Off to IYR with 52 items!!!! Wowser! I was really surprised at what I had again accumulated.
I am currently on a weight loss journey. As I change sizes, the large will go straight to the IYR as soon as I can wear the next size comfortably. (I never got rid of smaller sizes knowing that I would get right back in them.--yup, that happened :-( The upside is, it wont' cost me $ to stay clothed!! I'm not a trendy dresser, so it won't bother me to wear older clothing.
Cheers to you and the girls on all your successes :-)
My hats off to you for all that you have done to minimize the "stuff". And keeping it up is a job all its own, but so rewarding. I applaud you. And cheers on your weight loss journey as well. Maintaining our health and our home should be one of our greatest accomplishments.
DeleteMinimalism has been such an important part of my life, especially the last few years. It has helped to simplify my life so much - and it has helped as my husband and I have made a couple of moves across the country.
ReplyDeleteI do not enjoy moving. I can't imagine doing so with a house packed full of stuff. Yikes! Great work with your minimizing journey Brooke. I agree with you on the importance it has made in life.
DeleteI too have been scaling back. My husband and I moved into a house in July of 2018 which was 1,000 square feet smaller than the one we had been living in. Even though we got rid of a lot of stuff, we still ended up moving a lot of stuff to the new house. Sadly, my husband passed away suddenly four months later so getting settled into the new house came to a halt for a while. I'm back at it though and cleaning out as I go. There are boxes and bins in the garage and I don't even know what's in them! I will get it done though. It's funny how when I was younger, all I wanted to do was accumulate things and now all I want to do is get rid of what I don't need. I realize too at 70 yrs old that at some point in the future my children will have to go through my things and I want to make it as easy as possible for them. I agree it is liberating and makes life a lot simpler!
ReplyDeleteOne of my motivating factors is that I do not want my children to have to go through all of my stuff after I die. I want to make it easy on them. In the meantime I will be making it easy on myself. All my best to you as you continue your minimizing journey. XXX
DeleteI did a major purge a year ago in anticipation of listing the house for sale. It didn't sell, but I continue on the path of only keeping what I need and letting go of the rest. I've sent several boxes to the local thrift store in the last couple of months.
ReplyDeleteI agree, limiting the amount of stuff makes keeping the house clean and tidy much easier!
Isn't it amazing how much easier it is to keep the house clean. What a bonus!
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