Editor’s Note: This is a guest post by Sarah Peck.
“We live in a world of scarcity. Which means we feel like we never have enough.” – Brené Brown
Living in a world of scarcity means that we’re constantly searching for the next thing to fill us up, the next destination or achievement to make us whole. Our world is filled with messages that tell us we don’t have enough space, enough stuff, enough clothes, enough fitness. We’re never skinny enough or pretty enough or good enough or rich enough.
This scarcity model drives consumption and accumulation; it spurs us to want more, to buy things because we think it will fill the void. We press to work harder, to get fitter, to buy more clothes, to acquire more things in the name of filling the hole.
The problem with scarcity, however, is that you can’t fill it or fix it with things.
The answer to scarcity, ironically, isn’t more. It is enough.
What you have is enough. Who you are is enough. As Danielle LaPorte says in her Fire Starter Sessions: “You already have everything you need.”
What about Minimalist Enough?
This cuts both ways, however. As a person with lots of things, and an apartment with hundreds of books, I sometimes feel like my efforts to de-clutter and reduce the number of things that surround me aren’t enough. And the thought begins to creep in: I’m not minimalist enough. I see someone who is minimalist and only has 100 things and the internal voice begins again, “I guess I’m not minimalist… enough.”
These attitudes are pervasive and can race around in my head. I can quickly become overwhelmed with the desire to eliminate stuff, lose weight, be better, do more, achieve….more.
But the idea of minimalism isn’t about reaching a goal, or checking off a box, or reaching a certain destination. To me, minimalism is realizing that what I already have is enough, and that adding clutter to the pile won’t make it any better. And chasing a dream of more minimalism is, ironically, not what I’m after either.
To me, as I breathe out and sigh into the life that I’m living, and find gentler ways to tweak, edit, and refine; I find that recognizing what is important and what is not is the most critical exercise.
Stripping away the excess lets us get to the bones of what really matters. Get to the heart space. Get to the pieces that are important. And that level can be different for different people.
My Modest Minimalist Journey.
I recently conducted an experiment in which I decided to stop buying new clothes for the entire year. (There were two exceptions: shoes and underwear, but only as needed). For an entire year, I lived without buying anything new, on purpose. As a female in a clothes-and-image-centric society, I wanted to see what it was like to live without shopping for a while.
I was always dismayed by the number of female friends that were readily going into debt to maintain their image in public. When I thought about it, $400 outfits (the average price on any feature shopping magazine page) can add up to a lot of money if one were to wear a new outfit every day for a year. (That’s $150,000 just on clothes—who are we kidding?). You might think I’m joking—but to be perfectly honest, I know people who are $20,000 and $30,000 in credit card debt from clothes shopping alone. The image pressures on females (and males!) can be increasingly intense.
Yet over the year, as I experimented in my journey of wearing and re-wearing the same outfits hundreds of times, I also found there were times when I got discouraged—especially when I looked around online and saw things like the Versalette by revolution apparel. I inadvertently compared myself to other people who were doing a better job at buying nothing than I was.
But then I realized: I don’t have to be the best or the most minimalist. I can be minimalist enough. Minimalism isn’t about winning, and it isn’t about a particular achievement. It’s about finding out what matters to you, and getting rid of the peripheral.
Over the course of the year, I thinned out my closet and pared down to a few favorite items. I made over twenty trips to charity with bags of clothes and gently worn shoes that I no longer needed. At one point, I had socks and underwear with holes in them, and I got out my sewing machine and fixed them up. Making old things new again was surprisingly satisfying. Getting rid of all of my extra socks—and just having a few pairs to use each day—actually made my life simpler. The process of getting rid of things reminded me of what I liked—and what mattered.
Over time, I started to become acutely aware of everything that crossed the physical threshold of my front door. The amount of stuff that piled up around me on a daily basis crept into my consciousness, and I’m still surprised by the amount of clutter we let into our lives each day. Every time I brought something new in—mail, letters, books, ideas, shopping bags—I tried to make a conscious effort that the stuff I was bringing with me was valuable, and that I was also taking enough stuff out of the apartment each day to keep my space maintainable.
Untethering from the need to consume was surprisingly easy. It was the attitude change that made the most difference: looking through my things and realizing I already had enough—that I didn’t have to rush out and buy something new to fill a hole or a need—let me breathe again. It was relaxing and reassuring to know what I had was okay. What you are is already good enough.
I learned, slowly, that having excess stuff was giving me a headache, wasting my time and energy, and wasting a lot of money I wanted to focus on eliminating debt.
Over time, I will continue to whittle away at the things I don’t need in order to make space for the things I love. It turns out, all those unnecessary clothes were crowding out the space of the things I loved. I got rid of several boxes and cleared off a space for all of my books—one of my loves. Clearing out, to me, is about reducing the unnecessary clutter in your life to make space for what matters, and finding a balance that lets your soul breathe. It’s about stripping away the things you don’t need so you can focus on what’s important.
Sometimes a subtle attitude shift or a small sacrifice can make a big difference. Like taking the time to appreciate that what you already have is enough. And your effort? It’s enough.
Because stuff isn’t what matters.
What you have is enough. YOU are enough.
***
Sarah Peck is a writer, designer and storyteller.
Sarah I too have observed both ends of the spectrum with minimalism, one needs to make it their own. Some of my personal tricks to wardrobe contentment include: Hang drying my clothing for maxim lifespan, having an extremely tiny annual budget (perhaps buying 1-3 new clothing items, not including socks etc.) and when asked for a gift idea requesting a small gift card to a favorite clothing shop. Thanks to refreshing blogs like these it’s become far easier to jump out of the clothing rate race; we have a community out there supporting the joys of simplicity and owning fewer possessions, yet ones that bring you high gratification!
Hi Sarah,
I did a similar exercise in the year I tried not to buy anything, and as with all the minimalist exercises I’ve tried, its surprisingly easy to get started, but as you found, it does become a little tough to maintain over a long period. One thing I found at the end of the year, was how quickly clothes seem to wear out. It taught me that when I replace items, that a few well-made classics, will outlast some of the modern-day ‘bargains’. As a man I may not be under the same cultural pressure to look good, but I’m sure the same principle applies.
Hi Sarah,
What a wonderful post! I’m tempted to say: You’ve said ‘enough’ and said it perfectly!
But I also wanted to let you know how inspiring your story is and how it’s made me think of what I’ve bought this year so far, one pair of shoes, one white t-shirt and one white blouse and I’ve just realised that’s really not very much and definitely ‘enough’ for me!
I loved reading this, thank you,x
Wonderful! I strive for the same kind of clarity in my own life!
I loved this post. I felt such a sense of peace reading it…..being reminded that I *am* enough. And that even my minimalism journey is enough. After all, it’s a journey, always changing and that’s enough.
Thank you very much for this article. I really love the tone of your writing style.
A great post today!
I have a saying… everyone says
“you can’t have everything” well you can, just not all at the same time.
Start by finding the greatest treasure in the universe (see my web site)
Then “things” will have little value or power over you
If you want something get it… but don’t get consumed by it… let it go and move on to something else, it is a long life (if you know how to live) over time you can have as much as anyone without feeling like you are coming from “scarcity” .
We all go through phases…Personally, I like extreme and immediate change, then I work my way back to a happy medium.
Refreshing!
I love this line, “What you have is enough. Who you are is enough.”
Even though I shopped bargains and clearance sales for mix-and-match outfits, the temptation for more was always present. “Oooh, this will go with that, tooooo.”
But I noticed, when I find one piece I love I wear it more often. Value vs. bargain. The closet is thinning (needs another whack of the material machete) and the laundry is becoming less overwhelming. What a trickle affect.
Thanks for sharing your closet, and your heart!
I love this post! It is really much hard to remember what “enough” is! I think about this idea A LOT in relation to my home and family and have been wanting to put some of this focus into my wardrobe. I love having just the right thing to wear. I have a full closet but only really wear a few things. There is a vague sense of “too much” but “what if I need it?” that I would like to understand about myself. Thanks for sharing your journey.
After living in Japan and England for 3 years then returning to the Canadian prairie I started to hate clothes shopping. Part of this was through paring down my wardrobe because of overseas moves, but a larger part of it had to do with a change in quality and style of clothing in Japan and the UK compared to North America. I have bought very few clothes since my return to Canada in 2006 and still have almost all the simple, still stylish, and incredibly well made clothing I bought in Japan. I shocked a friend recently by telling her how much I dislike clothes shopping. She had mistakenly assumed I shopped a lot because she always sees me as well-dressed. Quality and style over quantity has worked so well for me, and now my husband and son are both as aware of that as I am.
Great post Sarah. I wholeheartedly agree that owning fewer socks is one of the little things that has a disproportionate impact on quality of life!