I recently asked a question on social media I thought would be fun, “If you had the chance, what advice would you give your 18-year-old self about minimalism?”
The responses were brilliant! So much so, I decided to collect the highlights here.
The wisdom contained in these responses goes beyond 18-year-olds. There is wonderful truth contained here for all of us to hear—whether for the first time or the hundredth time.
100 Things I’d Say to My 18-Year Old Self About Minimalism
1. Don’t be in such a hurry to furnish your home.
2. I promise Starbucks isn’t worth it. You’re going to need the money, trust me.
3. Marry someone that’s on the same page you are.
4. Don’t promise anyone you will keep or treasure their possessions. It results in too much guilt.
5. There are no “Joneses.”
6. It’s okay to have a lot of kids and not a lot of stuff.
7. Don’t buy the crystal. You’ll never use it.
8. You won’t remember the things you bought at 18, but you will remember the trip you took with your friend who later died of cancer.
9. You can enjoy a book without buying it.
10. Just because it’s on sale doesn’t mean you need it.
11. You don’t need to buy an outfit every time you go out.
12. Don’t let anyone (even mom and grandma) convince you that buying a house and filling it full of family heirlooms is normal and what everyone does.
13. Experiences with loved ones will be what you cherish throughout life, not the stuff you accumulate.
14. Save for a house or a trip or a concert, not a pair of shoes.
15. Under no circumstances should you ever rent a storage space.
16. Don’t feel embarrassed by the hand-me-down 1977 Oldsmobile Omega. It’s a wonderful gift.
17. Don’t buy clothes to make yourself feel happy, it just doesn’t work.
18. Don’t use credit cards to buy more junk you don’t need.
19. She who travels lightest travels fastest.
20. Filling your new apartment with all the pretty things from Target doesn’t give you worth or your life meaning.
21. “Retail therapy” doesn’t work.
22. Start minimalism young and invest your money instead.
23. Everything you buy is an anchor. Someday when you want to pull up that anchor, you’ll find you’re stuck and can’t go anywhere.
24. Advertising cons us into buying stuff we don’t need.
25. Patience, not instant gratification, is the gateway to a more joyful life.
26. You don’t have to do what your family does.
27. That outfit won’t hide the fact that you’re unhappy and need to make big changes.
28. Don’t start collecting Precious Moments figurines.
29. Sell your used college textbooks. You’re never going to look at them again.
30. Don’t get busy “keeping up with trends.” Buy what you like, but keep it simple and classy.
31. Buy less, donate your time and money to those less fortunate.
32. All those VHS tapes and CDs are going to be obsolete in a short period of time.
33. Having more doesn’t equal happiness and stuff can actual be a cause of stress.
34. I know right now you really want to fit in. But your friends will love you and appreciate you for who you are.
35. Try extreme minimalism (for the thrill of it) while you’re still single and free.
36. A house becomes a home when you add love, not stuff.
37. Most people are buying things they don’t need with money they don’t have to impress people they don’t like.
38. It might be in style today, but give it a few months and no one will want it. Not even Goodwill.
39. Regarding clothes: By the time you lose enough weight to fit into it, it will be out of style.
40. It may have been a gift to you, but you don’t have to keep it for the rest of your life.
41. You’re going to get everything you ever wanted, and it still won’t be enough.
42. Don’t register for those special occasion dishes, glassware, and other fancy items when you get married.
43. Stop spending travel money on souvenirs.
44. Appreciate the little things. They are the big things, and more valuable than any material thing you’ll ever own.
45. If you can’t use it now, give it a new home to someone who will.
46. Don’t build a huge house, you don’t need it and it costs more than you think to maintain.
47. The $10.00 wallet holds money as well as the $300.00 one, with an extra $290.00 inside!
48. Be happy you’re poor. Nothing helps you be a minimalist better than just not being able to afford things.
49. Learn some budgeting skills! Your paycheck doesn’t have to be all spent before the next one arrives.
50. There would be a lot less cleaning to do if you got rid of stuff!
51. Forget the materialistic stuff and focus on nurturing the relationships around you instead.
52. Your self-worth has nothing to do with what you have or how clean your house is.
53. Stuff does not increase your quality of life.
54. Never take into account the salary you might make tomorrow to justify an expenditure today.
55. Do not buy a house early until you’re 100% about living in an area.
56. You do not need all this crap—your credit is way more important!
57. Instead of making Christmas lists of stuff you want, ask for adventures like tickets and passes to shows, concerts, state parks, museums, zoos, and theme parks.
58. You will never need any Longaberger baskets.
59. You don’t need as much as you think you need. You can retire in your 50’s if you don’t waste so much.
60. You are never going to make a scrapbook. Stop hoarding junk.
61. Shopping is not a hobby.
62. Stop going to TJ Maxx every Friday after work.
63. The opinions of others cost you money. So learn to not care and save a fortune.
64. Do everything you can to save now for a down payment on your house.
65. Don’t believe the magazines.
66. Just because your mother hung onto things doesn’t mean you have to.
67. It’s much easier to never start with bad habits than to end them.
68. Scarcity mindset is generational trauma in disguise. Do the work.
69. It is possible to get through life without buying every issue of Cosmopolitan magazine.
70. Things won’t fill the holes in your life and heart.
71. You’re 18. Turn off the TV and go live life!
72. Pay more for quality, not quantity.
73. The world is deceitful and very, very temporary.
74. Get rid of it all. And live generously.
75. Stop shopping at Goodwill. Even 99¢ adds up.
76. Life is more peaceful with less stuff.
77. Don’t be afraid to be different.
78. Don’t buy anything on impulse. Write down what you want, walk away, and give it a couple of days.
79. Your dreams should include something better than a really big house.
80. Understand the difference between your real self and your fantasy self.
81. Spend more time outside.
82. Minimalism is not about denying yourself pleasure, it’s about removing dead weight.
83. Don’t buy that $40k truck. Please, don’t.
84. The bigger the wedding does not mean it’s better.
85. Don’t bother with jewelry. No one bothers to tell you that when you get older, you can’t stand having it on.
86. Clothes are not the answer to career success.
87. We don’t buy things with money, but with hours of our lives.
88. When Beanie Babies become a thing, just don’t.
89. You don’t need to buy the biggest house the bank says you can afford.
90. Develop the habit of living on less money than you make.
91. It’s not how much you acquire, it’s what you do with what you have.
92. Don’t waste your money on high-end brands.
93. Nobody really cares what you have.
94. Most people spend half their life acquiring things, and the other half getting rid of those things. Just skip the acquiring part.
95. You don’t need to upgrade your phone every year.
96. Find Dave Ramsey sooner.
97. Don’t go shopping just because you’re bored.
98. You don’t need one in every color.
99. Buying things won’t fix your depression.
100. Just because it’s free doesn’t mean you need it.
What would you add to the list? If you had the chance, what advice would you give your 18-year-old self about minimalism?
I got sucked into the family heirloom thing years ago. Now my house is stuffed with sentimental items I can’t figure out how to get rid of. If your family are “savers”, decide early to gently refuse when offered Grandma’s clock. And all the other stuff too. It’s a real burden.
Every dollar that you put into savings/investments will mean much more to you at age 65 than the other dollars that you used to buy “stuff”.
Grandad told me this, ‘What you own, owns you back’
Oh my gosh! No truer words were ever written about ‘stuff’.
This is great!
Your friends know you’re an oddball and love you for it. (And you look cute wearing old jeans with a thermal shirt and summer dress on top)!
Great list. I used to spend every dime I had between paychecks and then some. Over drawn all the time. Started reading Dave Ramsey book then took the coarse in my thirties. Wish I had this wisdom at 18. My advice is live below your means, don’t be a slave to fashion, don’t buy on payments and don’t buy the “fancy” dishes that you will never use. Our family is so big that we use paper plates at get-togethers. We never used the dishes I bought at 18 , complete with tea pot and gravy boat. I donated them a few years ago.
Also……the craziest thing I see is people spending 20-30 thousand dollars on a wedding (or expecting parents to pay for it) for a marriage that may not even last when that money could make a down payment on a starter home!!!
As another commenter said, you are just as married with a simple wedding that cost little to no money.
You are so right! It’s crazy to spend that much on a wedding. A person can have a nice wedding for far less.
You don’t need that object just because your neighbor or family member thinks that object is the best thing in the world.
Never start collecting ANYthing!!
When you are tempted to spend money (that you do have) on something you know you won’t use, instead find a ministry or a charity to put that exact amount towards instead. The pinch of spending the money will be there to help avoid the temptation of purchasing the thing, but what you have invested in instead will have positive ripple effects far far into the future, and perhaps even eternity.
The diamond ring doesn’t make you any more married than the plain one, and it can’t take the everyday wear of life like the plain one can. If the diamond ring loses a diamond you will not wear it, and spend even more money getting it fixed, and then not wearing it, because you are afraid to lose the diamond.
Sounds like the voice of experience. I can relate – having had some similar experiences.
Just because it’s a great buy don’t buy extra for your daughters and sister. You will have paid 3 x the price for yours! And they don’t want them. Take care of your own wallet only.
If you have a house fire and lose everything, it does not ALL have to be replaced!
Learn to do some things for yourself to save money.
I learned to give myself manicures and pedicures so I don’t have to spend the $20 + tip a week to pay someone else to do it. (I don’t wear polish, I just lightly buff them, so my cost is only the basic tools and a bit of time.)
I make my own stock from leftover bones and veggie scraps I keep in the freezer.
Knowing some basic sewing and spot cleaning skills can keep your clothes going longer.
I agree with not following clothing trends. Buy classic styles in as good a quality as you can afford so you can wear them for a long, long time.
Great list! Inspiring and much needed perspective at any stage of life.
Number 6 is exactly what I had on my list when I was 18 and always love(d) and live(d) by that!
In my sixties now happy and as grateful as can be, cherishing and enjoying life.
Thank you for this gem of a list.
Excellent list!
Learn to say “No, thank you” to other people’s stuff, even relatives.
You don’t need four whisks, or ten mugs.
Buying quality will pay in money and space in the long run.
Only collect things you really cherish, not because you think its value will increase years down the road.
I was married at age eighteen in 1982. What I would tell my eighteen year old self is stop worrying about what other people think of your clothes what you have etc. when you have your beautiful daughter at age nineteen and then two beautiful sons. Spend more time playing with them instead of cleaning the house! Create minimalist wardrobes for all the kids are yourself, don’t purchase so many Christmas gifts that you are up all night wrapping gifts finally falling into bed exhausted at 2am year after year! Spend money on music lessons and other lessons not toys! I never liked clutter so that wasn’t the problem but I spent so much time cleaning and organizing. I would tell my eighteen year old self Basically forget about the Joneses! We all did the best we could at the time but it’s hard living with regret. I would give the advice to an eighteen year old person today live a simple, minimal life.
I like #65. Don’t believe the magazines. I would add don’t even buy the magazines. I find most magazines I enjoy are online with my local library. And guess what, most of the time I don’t bother to read them.
Just because it’s easier to give your child what they scream for today, doesn’t mean they will still want it tomorrow.
Oh, that’s golden.
So, so true! Applies to the grandkids too.
Anytime you bring something in your home, an item needs to leave it. Keep things to a minimum.
Facts right there!
I do wish I had read this in my 30s. I’m almost 60 and paying down debt. Three year plan so that in four husband can retire.
Such good advice, but #’s 80 and 94 really spoke to me. I grew up with little to nothing. We where pole white trash and moved a lot so we either lost stuff in moves or never got attached to things because we l we it wouldn’t stay around long. I know I over compensated when I got married and we had our boys. Now I regret it and I’m in the # 94 phase of life.
I think I would tell my 18 year old self- Find faith in Jesus sooner!m He is all you need! I would also say, not having all the stuff you thought you wanted in the past, and not filling your house with the stuff you think you want in the present will give you more freedom, joy, and time to enjoy your future.
Excuse the typos- I have to learn to type these on the computer instead of using my phone with a very weird auto correct problem.
Unsubscribe to retailers newsletter to avoid buying on impulse.
When you are waiting in line at a cash register, don’t buy these items. That’s not why you came in the store in the first place.
Excellent advice. I wish I could have heard this at 18. I embraced the principles along the way and now that I’m in my 70s I live in a little house and don’t buy stuff anymore. I will share this with my grandchildren. Thank you!!
The best top 100 list ever!!!!!
Hooray!