Becoming Minimalist

Becoming a minimalist also requires that you have no use for sentimentality. Or fun.

marco:

I had a thought last night that I wanted to wake up this morning and get rid of 75% of the ‘stuff’ that I own. […]

How do you start to get rid of these things?

Get some sort of external storage. The basement, a small rental storage unit, your parents’ place, or New Jersey. The less convenient it is to access, the better.

Put nearly everything you own there. Leave out only what you’d pack if you were going on a trip for 2 weeks.

From that point forward, remove only what you need, as you need it, from storage. You’ll almost never need to do this.

After a year, get rid of everything that’s still in storage.

07/03/09 at 12:16pm
85 notes
  1. jwisser reblogged this from marco and added:
    I’ve essentially done this by leaving the majority of my stuff in boxes this summer. I think I may hold a yardsale early...
  2. xn--22h reblogged this from marco
  3. nshaikh reblogged this from thebrandonsouba
  4. jonathan-deamer reblogged this from marco and added:
    I like the sound of this, but it’s completely against a dream/ambition of mine to own some really nice pieces of art...
  5. mmichie reblogged this from marco
  6. thebrandonsouba reblogged this from marco
  7. thefourth reblogged this from marco
  8. singulus reblogged this from marco and added:
    ’ Sage Advice …...better.” “Put...weeks.” “From
  9. gompr reblogged this from marco and added:
    This is how I think about all of my possessions, all the time.
  10. daigski reblogged this from thedailyfiona and added:
    keep a filing cabinet with important documents… make sure this doesn’t get thrown out.
  11. executivecontour reblogged this from marco and added:
    Becoming a minimalist also requires that you have no use for sentimentality. Or fun.