The
Washington Post
(Forwarded
by Vicki Robin)
WASHINGTON
— Lia Kent, raised with what she calls a "Depression
mentality," always found it hard to throw things away.
Her North Potomac, Md., home was filled with clothes that
no longer fit, piles of magazines she never read and gifts
from relatives she never used.
But
a few years ago, Kent began rising earlier than her four children
and husband to have quiet time for spiritual reflection. And
something clicked.
"I
saw a house full of stuff…. I saw my house and how cluttered
it was," Kent said. "I just realized I had too much
excess and that [it was] getting in the way."
Kent
threw out hoarded magazines and gave away old clothes. She
"worked on not acquiring so much," she said, by
no longer shopping yard sales and making major purchases only
after deliberating about them.
"The
catalyst for this was my faith," said Kent, a Greek Orthodox
Christian. "My consumption of things was my greed, me
wanting more than my fair share."
Kent's
experience illustrates what religious leaders and lifestyle
experts describe as a growing appreciation by many Americans
that an overabundance of material goods can be a drag on spiritual
development. Increasingly, de-cluttering and downsizing are
being viewed in a spiritual context, as ways to remove distractions
to inner growth.
People
"are beginning to see that their possessions become a
weight and a barrier to their spiritual life and to their
happiness," said the Rev. Elizabeth Braxton, pastor of
Burke, Va., Presbyterian Church.
Kristin
van Ogtrop, managing editor of Real Simple, a New
York-based secular magazine that promotes simplicity as a
lifestyle, said readers had made it clear that they experienced
inner rewards from uncluttering.
"They
feel a greater sense of peace when … they're not overwhelmed
by their physical surroundings," she said
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