• Identify things you do not really need. Seek a smaller house rather than a large one. Identify at least one activity that you can withdraw from to make more free time in your life. Identify one relationship you need to sever.

    Anxiety and the Simple Life
    Fr Dn Charles Joiner

  • “I never wanted to have anything in my life that I couldn’t stand losing.”

    —Audrey Niffenegger

  • “How much happier is the man who owes nothing to anybody except the one he can most easily refuse, himself!”

    —Seneca, On the Shortness of Life

  • “If anyone thinks he is without attachment to some object, but is grieved at its loss, then he is completely deceiving himself.”

    —St. John Climacus, The Ladder of Divine Ascent

  • “The less I needed, the better I felt.”

    Charles Bukowski

  • You can live a life of ingratitude where you spend all of your money, or you can live a life of service where you invest it in yourself and others. Your choice.

    I used to think I was somebody. So I used all my money to prove it.

    Now I know that I’m nobody unless I’m helping somebody. This isn’t a bad thing, despite what you see on social media. I simply don’t care about being seen anymore. I’m happy being invisible or visible.

    Money Can’t Buy Happiness (trust me, I’ve tried).
    Jane Hwangbo

  • 22.  Go without. Try not replacing something, go without and see what creative solutions appear.

    25 Ways to Choose Less Every Day

  • Often, waiting on a purchase and living without it makes you realize either you already had something that did the job or you didn’t really need the thing in the first place.

    Do Less: A Minimalist Guide to a Simplified, Organized, and Happy Life
    Rachel Jonat

  • “But that’s how it is when you start wanting to have things. Now, I just look at them, and when I go away I carry them in my head. Then my hands are always free, because I don’t have to carry a suitcase.”

    ―Tove Jansson, Comet in Moominland

  • “When you discard something, you gain more than you lose.”

    Goodbye, Things: The New Japanese Minimalism
    Fumio Sasaki