by
Linda Breen Pierce
"Simplify,
Simplify…" More than a century after Henry David
Thoreau uttered these words, his plea for simplicity has more
significance now than ever before. We work hard and play hard,
filling nearly every moment with activity. Most families believe
they need two incomes to pay for a standard of living that
has doubled in the last 50 years. But do we? Based on my three-year
study of over 200 people who have simplified their lives,
I found that we can work less, want less, and spend less,
and be happier and more fulfilled in the process. Here are
ten suggestions to simplify your life. Don't try to simplify
your life in a few weeks or months; most people need an initial
period of three to five years to complete this transition.
Small, gradual steps are best.
1. Don’t let any material thing come into your
home unless you absolutely love it and want to keep it until
it is beyond repair. Too much stuff — it's
suffocating us. Purchasing, maintaining, insuring, storing
and eventually disposing of our stuff sucks up our precious
life energy.
2. Live in a home with only those rooms that you or
someone in your family use every day. Create a cozy
home environment that fits your family. You will find this
is much more satisfying than living in a museum designed to
impress your friends. Spending time and money to maintain
a home that is larger than you truly need diverts these resources
from more fulfilling endeavors.
3. Limit your work (outside of the home) to 30 hours
a week, 20 if you are a parent. To live a balanced
life, we need "down" time — time to daydream,
to relax, to prepare a leisurely meal, to take a walk. If
we surround our structured activities with empty spaces, those
activities will become more productive and meaningful.
4. Select a home and place of employment no more than
30 minutes away from each other. Commuting time is
dead time. It nourishes not the body, the mind, nor the soul.
Preserve your energy and money for more rewarding life experiences.
5. Limit your children's extracurricular activities
to one to three a week, depending on age. Otherwise,
you will exhaust yourself and your children will grow up addicted
to constant stimulation.
6. Take three to four months off every few years and
go live in a foreign country. Living in a different
culture fascinates, excites, and vitalizes us. It teaches
us to live in the present, a core practice of simple living.
We gain perspective when we experience a foreign culture.
We learn how much we have to be grateful for.
7. Spend at least an hour a week in a natural setting,
away from crowds of people, traffic, and buildings.
Three to four hours of nature time each week is even better.
There is nothing more basic, more simple, than the natural
world.
8. Do whatever you need to do to connect with a sense
of spirit in your life, whether it be prayer, religious services,
journal writing, meditation, or spiritually-related reading.
Simplicity leads to spirituality; spirituality leads to simplicity.
Cultivate a practice of silence and solitude, even for 15
to 30 minutes a day. Your spirituality will evolve naturally.
9. Seek the support of others who want to simplify
their lives. Join or start a simplicity circle if
you enjoy group interaction. Living simply in our culture
can be a lonely journey. Your friends and family may still
be on the work-n-spend treadmill and are unlikely to give
you support. Participating in a study group will give you
support and validation for your choices.
10. Practice saying no. Say no to those things
that don’t bring you inner peace and fulfillment, whether
it be more material things, greater career responsibility,
or added social activities. Be vigilant with your time and
energy; they are limited resources. If you say yes to one
thing (like a job promotion), recognize that you are saying
no to something else (perhaps more time with family). Live
consciously and deliberately.
Linda Breen Pierce is the founder of The Pierce Simplicity
Study and the author of Choosing Simplicity: Real
People Finding Peace and Fulfillment in a Complex World
and Simplicity Lessons: A 12-Step Guide to Living Simply.
She can be reached at pierce@gallagherpress.com
and her excellent website is at: http://www.gallagherpress.com/pierce/
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