Simplicity is ultimately a product of focusing on what matters.
- A simpler life is about subtracting the obvious and adding the
meaningful. Thus, you are wealthy in proportion to the number of
unnecessary things you can afford to live without.
- Simplifying is not merely seeing how little you can get by with –
that’s poverty – but how efficiently you can put first things first, and
use your time accordingly to pursue the things that make a difference and mean the most to you.
- Besides the art of getting things done, there is the often-forgotten art of leaving things undone. The simplicity and efficiency of life relies heavily on the elimination of non-essentials.
- Overcommitting is the biggest mistake most people make against
living a simpler life. It’s tempting to fill in every waking minute of
the day with to-do list tasks or distractions. Don’t do this to
yourself. Leave space.
- Just because you can doesn’t mean you should. There are so many
activities that sound fun and exciting. We check Facebook, Instagram or
Snapchat and see what others are doing and immediately want to add
these things to our lives. But before you let these new ideas get the
best of you, remember that by adding too many things to your life, you
are subtracting space. And that space is vital to focusing on what
matters most.
- Distractions are both more tempting and more damaging than we
realize. When we fill our lives with distractions, its often because
we’re scared of what life might be like without constant social media,
TV, video games, snacks, chats, music, etc. Don’t numb yourself with
noise. Don’t let distractions hold you back. Control your distractions
before your distractions control you. (Read The Power of Less.)
- You can’t live a simpler life if you’re unwilling to change and let go of what you’re used to.
- Priorities don’t get done automatically. You have to make time for
what’s important to you: time with your significant other, time with
your kids, time for creating, time for learning, time for exercise,
etc. Push everything else aside to make time. By saying no to more
things that sound really exciting, you get to say yes to more of what’s
truly important.
- Rising earlier helps. A quiet, unrushed morning routine is a gift to treasure. (I awake early so that I have quiet time to read, write, and practice a gratitude meditation.)
- Letting go of old routines and habits and building new ones can be
hard, but it’s easier if you do a 30-day challenge. Let go of something
for 30 days and see how it affects your life. (Letting go of cable TV
was one of the best decisions Angel and I made this past year – no more
continuous, distracting noise in our home, and no more advertisements
for stuff we don’t need.)
- Buying more stuff doesn’t solve our problems. Neither does more snack food or another TV program.
- Shopping isn’t a hobby, and it certainly isn’t therapy. It’s a
waste of time and money, and inevitably leads to a cluttered life.
- When we travel lightly, we’re freer, less burdened, and less
stressed. This applies to traveling through life too, not just
traveling through an airport.
- It’s not how many, or how few, things we own that matters. It’s
whether we make those things count. Thus, it’s better to have three
good books on your bookshelf that you’re actually going to read rather
than 300 you never get around to.
- Decluttering your physical space can lead to a less cluttered mental
space. These visual distractions pull on us and distract us in more
ways than we often realize. (Read The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up.)
- Overthinking is one of the most rampant sources of stress and mental
clutter. The key is to realize that the problem is not the problem.
The problem is the incredible amount of overthinking you’re doing with
the problem. Let it go and be free.
- Positivity always pays off in simplifying outcomes. So before you
waste it on anger, resentment, spite or envy, think of how precious and
irreplaceable your time is.
- Stay out of other people’s drama. And don’t needlessly create your own.
- A simpler, more positive mindset can be created anytime and anyplace
with a change in thinking. Because frustration and stress come from
the way you react, not the way things are. Adjust your attitude, and the frustration and stress evaporates.
- The simplest secret to happiness and peace in the present is letting
every circumstance be what it is, instead of what you think it should
be, and making the best of it.
- Gratitude always makes life easier to deal with. Because happiness
comes easier when you stop complaining about your problems and you start
being grateful for all the problems you don’t have.
- Make mistakes, learn from them, laugh about them, and move along. Waste not a minute on outcomes you can’t control.
- There is a huge amount of freedom that comes to you when you take nothing personally. (Angel and I discuss this in detail in the “Self-Love” chapter of 1,000 Little Things Happy, Successful People Do Differently.)
- The truth – your truth – is always the simplest path forward. If
you listen closely to your intuition you will always know what is ‘best’
for you, because what is best for you is what is true for you.
- The feeling you get from doing something important (and true) is far
better and less stressful than the feeling you get from sitting around
wishing you were doing it.
Afterthoughts
For the cynics out there who might say the list of lessons above is
too long to be “simpler,” there are really only two steps to
simplifying:
- Identify what’s most important to you.
- Eliminate as much as you possibly can of everything else.
Of course, that advice is not terribly useful unless you understand
how to apply it to various areas of your life… which is why I gave you
the lessons above.
Your turn…
Which lesson above do you resonate with the most? What has been
needlessly complicating your life? Leave a comment below and share your
thoughts and insights.
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