“While we try to teach our children all about life, our children teach us what life is all about.” —Angela Schwindt
Children add joy, purpose, and fulfillment to our lives. They bring us smiles, optimism, and cheerful attitudes. And given the chance, they will teach us valuable life lessons.
Certainly, growing children (physically, socially, intellectually, and emotionally) have added a new dimension to our minimalist journey, but I would’t want it any other way. In fact, some of the most important lessons about life and minimalism have been learned by watching my children.
Consider these:
1. One neighborhood friend is worth more than a basement full of toys. My two kids can spend countless hours with their neighborhood friends running from yard to yard, playing tag, catching bugs, or swinging on swings. They can spend every afternoon and evening together without being bored. But take them away from their friends for one Saturday at home with their toys… and boredom almost immediately sets in. The joy of playing alone in a roomful of toys quickly fades.
LIFE LESSON: Relationships with others are always more exciting and fulfilling than possessions.
2. Clothes are not worn to impress others. My First Grade son has two requirements for his clothing: 1) that he can get them dirty and 2) that he won’t get too hot. He has never worn a shirt to impress a girl or a pair of slacks to impress his teacher. (He has worn a shirt and slacks because his parents asked him to, but that’s a different subject). I don’t think the idea of trying to impress others by wearing the latest fashions has ever crossed his mind. He feels no pressure to conform or impress. And thus, he’s simply content with a clean tanktop and shorts.
LIFE LESSON: Wear clothing for its usefulness rather than as an attempt to impress others.
3. Life’s pains are healed best by a hug and a kiss… not new toys. My daughter falls down often (as most four year olds do). And when she skins her knee, she only wants one thing – her mommy to pick her up, give her a kiss, and tell her that everything is going to be okay. She doesn’t ask for a new toy… she only desires love and security. She has found the antidote to pain and wouldn’t trade it for anything else.
LIFE LESSON: Don’t look towards “things” to soothe the pain we encounter in life. Instead, seek love, acceptance, and security.
4. Fancy possessions and character are completely unrelated. I love helping in my son’s First Grade classroom because Kindergarten and First Grade may be the only places left on earth where labels don’t exist. At age 7, everyone is accepted and everyone plays with everyone else. Each person starts the day on equal footing. Nobody is pre-judged by the house that they live in or the clothes that they wear. Oh, that our world would begin to resemble a first-grade classroom.
LIFE LESSON: Judge people by their hearts and character, not by the meaningless externals of life.
5. Too many toys in a box only get in the way of the good ones. A funny thing happens after holidays. A mountain of new toys enter my childrens’ lives. The toys are initially meant with incredible excitement. However, after two or three days, they are pushed to the side as my kids return to the tried-and-true toys they had been playing with long before the holiday ever occurred. The new toys we thought would make them happier, don’t. Instead, they just start to get in the way.
LIFE LESSON: We often think that material possessions will bring lasting excitement into our life, but most of the time they just end up getting in the way.
6. The more toys you play with, the more time you spend cleaning them up. Because we clean up every night before bed (well, almost every night), our kids understand this pretty simple equation. The more toys we pull out of the closet, the more time we spend cleaning them up. And conversely, the less time we spend actually enjoying them.
LIFE LESSON: The more possessions we own, the more of our time is required to care for them, clean them, organize and sort them.
7. A hike in the woods beats a new video game any day. Video games simply can not compete with the graphics, the full-sensory experience, or the relationship of a family walk through the woods. Never have, never will. And for that matter, nothing else produced on television can compete either.
LIFE LESSON: Turn off the television. Go outside. Live life, don’t just watch it.
Perhaps children are in this world because we as grown-ups have so much left to relearn.
Michelle Traudt says
I love this post! My favorites are the first two. My 7 yr. old daughter fits right into those descriptions. She could play with our neighbor for days on end. Sometimes the minute she gets up she wants to know “what Lily is doing today?”. She never tires of playing with Lily. She also dresses herself and there is clearly no concern with what others think.
Leslie says
This post made me contemplate. I wrote a response on my blog named 7 un-minimalist lessons learned from life. I guess I just gave thoughts as to how we unlearn these amazing things we are born with.
Marci@OvercomingBusy says
A couple months ago, we took all our 5 year old’s toys out of his room and put them in the spare room. He had not been taking care of them and our idea was to give him one toy back per week (if he had behaved) of his choice and only let him have a set number of them back at all. Well, 2 1/2 months went by and he only asked for one! Guess he doesn’t really need all the rest! We’ve been telling the grandparents this all along………
Adam Martin says
Very good post. It will make you think about a lot of things.
Luke @ simplifi.de says
“Live life, don’t just watch it.
I love this phrase – this was my biggest realization in limiting my TV watching time… I would rather have the amazing experience myself than watch a two-dimensional moving picture of someone else having an amazing experience!
Karen says
Not exactly minimalist, because it involves spending money, but here’s my experience with children and nature…
A few weeks ago, I spent a couple hundred dollars on bird feeders, seed, a dish for a bird bath, an identification guide, and outdoor kits with kid-sized binoculars, flashlight, compass, etc. It is by far the best money I’ve ever spent on our family. The kids spend hours curled up in our old tent, reading books and watching the birds. They’ve explored nook and cranny of the yard and never want to come inside. They even sleep out there!
When I mentioned this to my father, he reminded me that my brother and I did the same thing when we were my kids’ age. It made me smile. My fondest memories of childhood revolved around summers spent exploring the creek near my house. It’s wonderful to see my kids have the type of experiences.
Dustin says
Minimalism isn’t about not spending money. I think it’s more so closing to spend it on experiences rather than things that either aren’t practical or won’t be remembered. It seems to me like your money was spent creating an experience for your children and having more life experiences is one of the most fundamental building blocks of minimalism.
Bill Gerlach says
Awesome. #4 is so true. My wife and I were just commenting about the circle of friends that our oldest (who is in first grade) has. Innocence prevails and everyone is on the same level. The thought of watching this come undone as the years progress is sad.
#7 is near and dear. We feel fortunate to have to beg our kids to come in for dinner.
Cheryl says
This is so true. Minimalist lesson from my 3 year old: He’s had his preschool back pack for about 2 years now and it’s getting kind of grubby. Not torn, just really in need of a wash. I mentioned getting a new one to him, thinking he might want a fun character one or something. His response: I don’t need a new backpack, Mom, I already have one. Lightbulb! He’s absolutely right. Why get another one when the one he has is completely sufficient. I think of this statement often when making new purchases. The wisdom of a 3 year old.
Peggy says
My kids used the same backpack and coats as long as they fit, and then I passed the down to the younger. I washed then often. Did the same with shoes. We always had savings account for emergencies, even when we were newly weds because of my love for thrift. (shopped at lots of garage sales and thrift shops. Folks get rid of items that look new, and I wash clothes and put toys, etc in the dishwasher.
Christy Z says
As they get older though, you will need to remind them of these realities. Marketing of the idea that you need specific stuff to bring happiness starts young.
Stephanie says
I totally agree with your comment! I constantly try to undo the “marketing message” with my teenagers!
Peggy says
When we watched TV, and that was not often, I explained why every commercial was only trying to make money, not a crime, but to really think about what was needed and what was wasteful.
Miguel de Luis says
One of the best minimalist posts I’ve read in a while. Well, the best in this week to be honest, but certainly striking and to the point. When do we forget our primeveal minimalism and fall in the trap? Teenagehood?