Category: AVARICE & ALMSGIVING & MINIMALISM

  • “Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; remember that what you now have was once among the things you only hoped for.”

    Epicurus

  • Not only does shopping not deliver freedom, it brings the exact opposite. Each purchase we make adds extra worry to our lives. Every physical item we own represents one more thing that can be broken, scratched, or stolen.

    9 Things That Shopping Can Never Deliver

  • “Fashion can be bought. Style one must possess.”

    Edna Woolman Chase

  • Styles, like everything else, change. Style doesn’t.
    —Linda Ellerbee

    Some of the biggest style icons of the last century were people who explicitly did not follow every new trend out there and instead had their own very distinctive looks from which they rarely strayed.

    How To Give Your Closet The Ultimate Minimalist Makeover

  • “The virtuous man involuntarily attracts everyone’s attention.”

    —St. John of Kronstadt, My Life in Christ

  • I don’t own many things—but everything I own adds value to my life.

    Each of my belongings—my kitchenware, furniture, clothes, car—functions either as a tool or adds positive aesthetic value to my life; that is, as a minimalist, every possession serves a purpose or brings me joy.

    Over time, though, situations’ll change—they always do. So I’m forced to ask the same important question over and over and over again: Does this thing add value to my life?

    And it’s not just material possessions at which I posit this query: I ask it in regard to relationships, social media, and any other potentially superfluous matters in life.

    I constantly ask this question because circumstances constantly change: because something adds value to my life today doesn’t mean it’ll add value to my life tomorrow, so I keep asking and I keep adjusting accordingly.

    DOES THIS ADD VALUE TO MY LIFE?
    Joshua Fields Millburn

  • “People today have made their lives difficult, because they are not satisfied with a few things, but are constantly chasing after more and more material goods.”

    Elder Paisios

  • Tell me, what better service do silver-encrusted tables and chairs of ivory-inlaid beds and couches provide than their simpler counterparts?  Yet for their sake the rich do not respond to the poor, not though thousands should come to their door crying with piteous voice.  Indeed, you refuse to give anything, insisting that it is impossible to satisfy the needs of those who beg of you.  You profess this to be true with your tongue, but your hand gives you the lie; silently, your hand bears witness to the falsehood, flashing as it does with the jewels from your ring.  How many could you have delivered from want with but a single ring from your finger?  How many households fallen into destitution might you have raised?  In just one of your closets there are enough clothes to cover an entire town shivering with cold.

    —St. Basil the Great, On Social Justice

  • “For the more you abound in wealth, the more you lack in love.”

    —St. Basil the Great, On Social Justice

  • “For just as a little wine becomes an opportunity for the drunkard to drink some more, so also the newly rich, after they have acquired much, desire even more.”

    —St. Basil the Great, On Social Justice