- Thoreau
I saw the angel in the marble and carved until I set him free.
- Michelangelo
Small movement is better than big
movement. No movement is better than small movement.
- Wang Xiang Zhai
A few years ago when my oldest daughter moved out of the house, we under took a big project in clearing out a lot of stuff. Stuff we had accumulated. Stuff we had in boxes that we haven't opened since we moved into our home 16 years ago; or even when we moved into the last house!
For a regular person it is hard enough to get rid of your stuff, but how about if you have a LOT of stuff? How about if you have everything?
I ran across an interesting article from which I posted an excerpt below. The full article may be read here.
Living With Less. A Lot Less.
By GRAHAM HILL
I LIVE in a 420-square-foot studio. I sleep in a bed that folds down
from the wall. I have six dress shirts. I have 10 shallow bowls that I
use for salads and main dishes. When people come over for dinner, I pull
out my extendable dining room table. I don’t have a single CD or DVD
and I have 10 percent of the books I once did.
I have come a long way from the life I had in the late ’90s, when, flush
with cash from an Internet start-up sale, I had a giant house crammed
with stuff — electronics and cars and appliances and gadgets.
Somehow this stuff ended up running my life, or a lot of it; the things I
consumed ended up consuming me. My circumstances are unusual (not
everyone gets an Internet windfall before turning 30), but my
relationship with material things isn’t.
We live in a world of surfeit stuff, of big-box stores and 24-hour
online shopping opportunities.
Members of every socioeconomic bracket
can and do deluge themselves with products.
There isn’t any indication that any of these things makes anyone any happier; in fact it seems the reverse may be true.
For me, it took 15 years, a great love and a lot of travel to get rid of
all the inessential things I had collected and live a bigger, better,
richer life with less.
It started in 1998 in Seattle, when my partner and I sold our Internet
consultancy company, Sitewerks, for more money than I thought I’d earn
in a lifetime.
To celebrate, I bought a four-story, 3,600-square-foot,
turn-of-the-century house in Seattle’s happening Capitol Hill
neighborhood and, in a frenzy of consumption, bought a brand-new
sectional couch (my first ever), a pair of $300 sunglasses, a ton of
gadgets, like an Audible.com MobilePlayer (one of the first portable
digital music players) and an audiophile-worthy five-disc CD player.
And, of course, a black turbocharged Volvo. With a remote starter!
I was working hard for Sitewerks’ new parent company, Bowne, and didn’t
have the time to finish getting everything I needed for my house. So I
hired a guy named Seven, who said he had been Courtney Love’s assistant,
to be my personal shopper. He went to furniture, appliance and
electronics stores and took Polaroids of things he thought I might like
to fill the house; I’d shuffle through the pictures and proceed on a
virtual shopping spree.
My success and the things it bought quickly changed from novel to
normal. Soon I was numb to it all. The new Nokia phone didn’t excite me
or satisfy me. It didn’t take long before I started to wonder why my
theoretically upgraded life didn’t feel any better and why I felt more
anxious than before.
My life was unnecessarily complicated. There were lawns to mow, gutters
to clear, floors to vacuum, roommates to manage (it seemed nuts to have
such a big, empty house), a car to insure, wash, refuel, repair and
register and tech to set up and keep working. To top it all off, I had
to keep Seven busy. And really, a personal shopper? Who had I become? My
house and my things were my new employers for a job I had never applied
for.
It got worse. Soon after we sold our company, I moved east to work in
Bowne’s office in New York, where I rented a 1,900-square-foot SoHo loft
that befit my station as a tech entrepreneur. The new pad needed
furniture, housewares, electronics, etc. — which took more time and
energy to manage.
AND because the place was so big, I felt obliged to get roommates — who
required more time, more energy, to manage. I still had the Seattle
house, so I found myself worrying about two homes. When I decided to
stay in New York, it cost a fortune and took months of cross-country
trips — and big headaches — to close on the Seattle house and get rid of
the all of the things inside.
I’m lucky, obviously; not everyone gets a windfall from a tech start-up
sale. But I’m not the only one whose life is cluttered with excess
belongings.
In a study published last year titled “Life at Home in the Twenty-First
Century,” researchers at U.C.L.A. observed 32 middle-class Los Angeles
families and found that all of the mothers’ stress hormones spiked
during the time they spent dealing with their belongings. Seventy-five
percent of the families involved in the study couldn’t park their cars
in their garages because they were too jammed with things.
Our fondness for stuff affects almost every aspect of our lives. Housing
size, for example, has ballooned in the last 60 years. The average size
of a new American home in 1950 was 983 square feet; by 2011, the
average new home was 2,480 square feet. And those figures don’t provide a
full picture. In 1950, an average of 3.37 people lived in each American
home; in 2011, that number had shrunk to 2.6 people. This means that we
take up more than three times the amount of space per capita than we
did 60 years ago.
Apparently our supersize homes don’t provide space enough for all our
possessions, as is evidenced by our country’s $22 billion personal
storage industry.
What exactly are we storing away in the boxes we cart from place to
place? Much of what Americans consume doesn’t even find its way into
boxes or storage spaces, but winds up in the garbage.
The Natural Resources Defense Council reports, for example, that 40
percent of the food Americans buy finds its way into the trash.
Enormous consumption has global, environmental and social consequences.
For at least 335 consecutive months, the average temperature of the
globe has exceeded the average for the 20th century. As a recent report
for Congress explained, this temperature increase, as well as acidifying
oceans, melting glaciers and Arctic Sea ice are “primarily driven by
human activity.” Many experts believe consumerism and all that it
entails — from the extraction of resources to manufacturing to waste
disposal — plays a big part in pushing our planet to the brink. And as
we saw with Foxconn and the recent Beijing smog scare, many of the
affordable products we buy depend on cheap, often exploitive overseas
labor and lax environmental regulations.
Does all this endless consumption result in measurably increased happiness?
In a recent study, the Northwestern University psychologist Galen V. Bodenhausen
linked consumption with aberrant, antisocial behavior. Professor
Bodenhausen found that “Irrespective of personality, in situations that
activate a consumer mind-set, people show the same sorts of problematic
patterns in well-being, including negative affect and social
disengagement.” Though American consumer activity has increased
substantially since the 1950s, happiness levels have flat-lined.
I DON’T know that the gadgets I was collecting in my loft were part of an aberrant or antisocial behavior plan during the first months I lived in SoHo. But I was just going along, starting some start-ups that never quite started up when I met Olga, an Andorran beauty, and fell hard. My relationship with stuff quickly came apart.
He is most wisely drunk who is half-drunk;
ReplyDeleteAnd flowers in half-bloom look their prettiest;
As boats at half-sail sail the steadiest,
And horses held at half-slack reins trot best.
Who half too much has, adds anxiety,
But half too little, adds possession's zest,
Since life's of sweet and bitter compounded,
Who tastes but half is wise and cleverest.
-- Li Mi-an (trans. Lin Yutang)
Thanks Walt!
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