Just after we moved (to our 825 square foot duplex) a friend sent around an email. Someone she knew was giving away their train table. Knowing that our young one loved, loved, loved trains she passed this fabulous news along to me. Oh I so wanted one of these two years ago!!! I had visions of the delight such a place could hold for DS2. But God's timing was impeccable. I had just worked my way away from three-quarters of the things I used to have. I was still in de-acquisition mode, not acquisition mode. As I thought about it, I realized that lacking the table, with it's defined layout for a train track, DS2 had been 'making do' with the floor. He’s done some amazingly complex bridges across his entire bedroom floor. He's run them out of one room and into the next. He's done so much more on the floor than he ever could on a train table. In fact, by the time the opportunity of the train table was offered, I discovered he'd probably feel confined by the table.
A side benefit of no room for stuff – more room for imagination! And without a table taking up space permanently, when the track is put away, the floor is wide open space for other imaginative play.
How many other one purpose possessions are taking up space? Do we really need them?
Friday, October 29, 2010
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Downsizing - step one
The first thing we did as we committed ourselves to a smaller footprint was to start looking at all the stuff we had accumulated. We began sorting it into one of four categories:
If you are not quite ready to start deaccessioning your belongings, there are some great resources available to help you start thinking about the benefits of less stuff. The Northwest Earth Institute has put together a fabulous workbook for their Voluntary Simplicity course. Designed to be used in a discussion group, it is also a great way for individuals to learn more about being intentional about simplifying your lifestyle. The workbook is a collection of essays and questions to promote thoughtful consideration of the ideas presented. I'll be assembling a resource list shortly. This one is at the top of my list.
- need it and want it
- need it but don't want it
- don't need it but want it
- don't need it and don't want it
If you are not quite ready to start deaccessioning your belongings, there are some great resources available to help you start thinking about the benefits of less stuff. The Northwest Earth Institute has put together a fabulous workbook for their Voluntary Simplicity course. Designed to be used in a discussion group, it is also a great way for individuals to learn more about being intentional about simplifying your lifestyle. The workbook is a collection of essays and questions to promote thoughtful consideration of the ideas presented. I'll be assembling a resource list shortly. This one is at the top of my list.
Monday, October 25, 2010
How?
In April, 2009, DH left his job to stay home with our newly adopted daughter (details about that at And Baby Makes Eight). We brought her home in September, 2008 and I was on leave until December. DH was on leave until March. We put her in daycare for a month. But we both wanted her home with us. We did the math and acknowledged that the second income wasn't doing much more than paying for childcare. It just didn't make sense.
But before it started paying for childcare, the second income was paying the mortgage. So something had to change. We decided we needed to sell our house and commit ourselves to a more frugal life. One that our single income could support. We moved closer to my office, into a small two-bedroom rental. To get there we had to downsize in a BIG way. We were leaving a fabulous 4-bedroom house in the suburbs, complete with double car garage, swimming pool, and gardens and fruit trees out back. It was a dream house. And we loved it. But we didn't love the monthly housing expense, which had always consumed a greater portion of our income than housing ever should have.
Summer of 2009 was spent freeing ourselves from the house and the things we had filled it with. We held multiple yard sales. Craigslist became my new best friend. And things went to the Goodwill. Some days it felt like we were never going to be finished giving things away. We started by selling and giving away all those things that we no longer wanted. That part was easy. The second yardsale was a little bit harder. It included things I really liked having - power tools, garden equipment, canning jars. But they were also things I knew I wasn't going to be needing at our new (tiny, urban) place. And my resolve was still strong. So I said goodbye to these things with a 'fare thee well', knowing I would miss them but happy they were off to a new and happy home. Then we were down to the things I didn't want to part with. They were still things we didn't need, but things I wanted none the less. The last yard sale included things that hurt to give up. Intellectually, I knew they were just things and it was still just stuff. But emotionally it felt like pieces of me being pushed out the door. It was hard. I grieved, but I let them go. I knew I wouldn't miss them in the long run. (And honestly, I can't tell you today what those things were!) It was hard, but we did it.
By September our new life was in full swing. I was (and still am) walking to work and back each day. DH and our littlest blessing were home together all day, and #2 son was settled in to a new Montessori school. We had a roof over our head and a new adventure in simplified urban living ahead of us. And the best part? We were finally truly living within our means.
But before it started paying for childcare, the second income was paying the mortgage. So something had to change. We decided we needed to sell our house and commit ourselves to a more frugal life. One that our single income could support. We moved closer to my office, into a small two-bedroom rental. To get there we had to downsize in a BIG way. We were leaving a fabulous 4-bedroom house in the suburbs, complete with double car garage, swimming pool, and gardens and fruit trees out back. It was a dream house. And we loved it. But we didn't love the monthly housing expense, which had always consumed a greater portion of our income than housing ever should have.
Summer of 2009 was spent freeing ourselves from the house and the things we had filled it with. We held multiple yard sales. Craigslist became my new best friend. And things went to the Goodwill. Some days it felt like we were never going to be finished giving things away. We started by selling and giving away all those things that we no longer wanted. That part was easy. The second yardsale was a little bit harder. It included things I really liked having - power tools, garden equipment, canning jars. But they were also things I knew I wasn't going to be needing at our new (tiny, urban) place. And my resolve was still strong. So I said goodbye to these things with a 'fare thee well', knowing I would miss them but happy they were off to a new and happy home. Then we were down to the things I didn't want to part with. They were still things we didn't need, but things I wanted none the less. The last yard sale included things that hurt to give up. Intellectually, I knew they were just things and it was still just stuff. But emotionally it felt like pieces of me being pushed out the door. It was hard. I grieved, but I let them go. I knew I wouldn't miss them in the long run. (And honestly, I can't tell you today what those things were!) It was hard, but we did it.
By September our new life was in full swing. I was (and still am) walking to work and back each day. DH and our littlest blessing were home together all day, and #2 son was settled in to a new Montessori school. We had a roof over our head and a new adventure in simplified urban living ahead of us. And the best part? We were finally truly living within our means.
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Why?
Simplified living has been a part of my vocabulary for three decades, from the time I was the young mother of a rapidly growing family working to make ends meet as a stay-at-home mom. My first introduction to the concept was the classic, Living More with Less. I paged through that book over and over, seeking ways to stretch the dollars we had, without ever considering the philosophical aspects of 'the simple life.'
Now I find myself not quite so young, but still mothering young children, and once again seeking to live more with less. Not just for the economic benefits that simplified living offers, but also as my contribution to sustainability.
Herein I hope to share the struggles and successes my family and I are having with intentionally opting-out of a consumer-based culture. The writing will be therapeutic for me. Maybe it'll inspire others.
Now I find myself not quite so young, but still mothering young children, and once again seeking to live more with less. Not just for the economic benefits that simplified living offers, but also as my contribution to sustainability.
Herein I hope to share the struggles and successes my family and I are having with intentionally opting-out of a consumer-based culture. The writing will be therapeutic for me. Maybe it'll inspire others.
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