minimalism
some food for thought this holiday (shopping) season
Thanks to retailers and giant corporations, the holiday season has transformed
over years into the “holiday shopping season,” and the most wonderful and
happiest time of the year has, unfortunately, become the most stressful and
difficult time of the year.
Yeah, this is the sad truth. We’re ruining the
you want to buy that thing? read this first
> “After the thrill of the chase, when the adrenaline of acquisition has worn off,
things will almost always go back to the way they were before. The main
difference is that we have fewer resources because of the time, energy, and
money we spent on that new whatever.”
— Colin
the three principles of digital discipline
> “Digital minimalists see new technologies as tools to be used to support things
they deeply value—not as sources of value themselves. They don’t accept the idea
that offering some small benefit is justification for allowing an
attention-gobbling service into their lives, and are instead interested in
applying
the art of setting limits
eliminate the needless wants
three components of a minimalist mindset
the minimalist abundance
Abundance is not about seeking and acquiring more. It’s much easier to simply
change our mind and our perspective. Often times, tapping into the abundance
mindset is all about tinkering with our consumption. Some of us believe that we
have a ‘need’ to consume more, because that is what