Becoming Yourself

Developing a Better You

Page 9 of 97

Do You Own Your Stuff or Does Your Stuff Own You?

I thought the old guy was nuts.

At 6’ 2” and 250 lbs with silver hair and a full gray beard, Bill was a gentle soul in an imposing body. After the church I was doing music for imploded resulting in both pastors leaving, he had been brought in on an interim basis as a calming presence to steady the ship. Being in his sixties, Bill quickly became a mentor figure to me, as my twenty-something self was reeling from the turmoil.

We were discussing how he was handling his possessions during his upcoming house move when he said the line that baffled me:

“You get to a point where you ask yourself if you own your stuff or your stuff owns you?”

I kept my face neutral and nodded politely, but I held an opposing view—I like my stuff. I want more stuff. 

Over the next twenty years, I got a lot of stuff. A big house in a gated community with mountain views. A library with custom shelves and wingback leather chairs. An upright video game console packed with arcade classics. Autographed posters from my favorite movies. The latest technology big screen TV. A baby grand piano. A backyard with a pool, hot tub, basketball court, and fire pit. Nice cars. It was fun.

For awhile.

Then my two kids got older, got busier, and went off to college. My wife was deep into her writing career. I noticed myself using our stuff less, enjoying our stuff less, even noticing our stuff less. It seemed like a lot. A lot of space. A lot of maintenance. A lot of expense. A lot of headache. It all began to feel heavy, like an invisible weight on my shoulders.

Then my wife and I watched a documentary called The Minimalists. It followed two guys who traveled the US talking about the merits of minimalism, a way of life that embraces having few physical possessions. They described the peace and freedom that resulted from the increased time and money that came from having less stuff.

Given my internal landscape at the time, it struck a chord. The lightness they spoke of made me jealous. So with a yellow legal pad in hand, I went through our entire house, noting every room, closet, cabinet, drawer, under-bed space, and flat surface holding a pile of something.

The pages filled quickly. I was astonished by the sheer volume of items we possessed. It was gobsmacking. The thought of doing something about it left me completely overwhelmed. I almost threw the list in a drawer and plunged my head back in the sand.

But I didn’t. I started with something easy, a small closet. I emptied it and sorted things into four piles: keep, sell, donate, trash. When the sell / donate / trash items were removed and the keep items were neatly returned to the closet, I was surprisingly happy. I felt a little bit of that invisible weight fall from my shoulders.

That first tiny success gave me the motivation to tackle a kitchen drawer. Then a cabinet. Then our office area. I gathered momentum and decluttered a room, then the small garage, followed by the big one. It took me a year and half to get through my list. You can imagine my satisfaction at scratching the last item off the legal pad. 

A year later, we decided to move to Sacramento to live near our son. Instead of buying a house, we rented an apartment in a walkable area. We took everything we needed and really wanted for our new, far smaller place, then hired an auction company to sell everything else in a single day, including both cars.

The sense of lightness and freedom was palpable. We loved our simpler, uncluttered, low-maintenance lifestyle. After three years, we moved back to Arizona and bought a 1054 square foot condo with one closet, pairing down even more.

Recently, we took another huge step on our minimalist journey and became nomads. We sold the condo, both our rental houses, and nearly all our possessions. Now everything we own fits in our daughter’s guest room closet and the back of our 2007 two-door Pontiac G6. We live in hotels, AirBnbs, and with friends and family, currently in the US, but we’ll soon be heading abroad.

We’re two months into this digital nomad journey, and the freedom is almost paralyzing. There are down sides—not having a place organized just for our comfort and tastes, the hassle of packing and unpacking, and transition days traveling from place to place are tedious. But the upsides are fantastic—a sense of lightness and adventure, seeing new places and meeting new people, visiting loved ones, having memorable experiences, no maintenance, little cleaning, low fixed expenses, and the flexibility to come and go as we desire. It’s marvelous.

Our love-affair with digital nomad life may come to an end, and if so, we’re good with that. We can always decide we’re done with the road and have a fixed address again. But for now, we’re enjoying this wonderful ride, one made possible by changing our perspective on stuff all those years ago.

Stuff is not bad. Stuff can be great. But excess stuff is not necessary for happiness. Some of the happiest people I’ve met have the least amount of stuff.

Is your stuff comprised of items that you truly want, need, and as organizing guru Marie Kondo says “sparks joy” in you? (We’ve discovered the number of items we need is actually quite small) Or is it a collection of things society and clever advertising say are “must haves”? Do your possessions really make you as happy as you thought they would? Or have they become slightly uncomfortable reminders of unmet expectations that you have to buy, store, clean, maintain, and insure?

Watch The Minimalists documentary on Netflix. Watch The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaners on Peacock (hilariously hosted by comedian Amy Poehler). Read articles by Marie Kondo (or stream her multiple shows on Netflix). Then pick a drawer or a closet or a tabletop to declutter. See how you feel letting things go. If you do, you’ll be on your way to more lightness and freedom, and you’ll take another step toward Becoming Yourself.

The Counterintuitive Benefits of Mindfulness

It’s completely counterintuitive. 

I’ve written about my efforts to live and work more “unhurriedly” before. It’s the idea that working slower and more deliberately with greater focus and attention produces a better outcome than faster-paced work. A little like “slow and steady wins the race,” but with an emphasis on mindfulness, which dictionary.com defines as:  

a technique in which one focuses one’s full attention only on the present, experiencing thoughts, feelings, and sensations but not judging them.

World-respected Buddhist practitioner and teacher Thich Nhat Hanh described mindfulness this way:

Mindful living is an art. You do not have to be a monk or live in a monastery to practice mindfulness. You can practice it anytime, while driving your car or doing housework. Driving in mindfulness will make the time in your car joyful, and it will also help you avoid accidents. You can use the red traffic light as a signal of mindfulness, reminding you to stop and enjoy your breathing. Similarly, when you do the dishes after dinner, you can practice mindful breathing so the time of dish washing is pleasant and meaningful. Do not feel you have to rush. If you hurry, you waste the time of dish washing. The time you spend washing dishes and doing all your other everyday tasks is precious. It is time for being alive. When you practice mindful living, peace will bloom during your daily activities.

thich nhat hanh, your true home, entry 29

The success of my attempts to practice mindfulness is mixed. It’s a completely different mindset for me. I’ve spent decades learning how to work faster, more efficiently, to fill all the gaps, to multitask, with a drive to cross as many things off my to-do list as possible. Yet when I manage to achieve this mindfulness approach, I’m shocked to find that:

1. I get MORE work done

2. I get BETTER work done

3. I ENJOY my work more

4. I feel RELAXED and PEACEFUL at the end of the day vs exhausted and harried

What is your normal pace of daily life? Is it characterized by striving attack or gentle grace? Pause regularly. Gaze out the window. Take a few deep breaths. Chat briefly with a friend, loved one, or co-worker. Make an extra cup of tea. Move with thoughtfulness and attention. If you do, you’ll experience a boost in both peace and productivity as you take another step toward Becoming Yourself.

This post was originally published on June 17, 2023.

Hope is an Axe

Sometimes four words can stop your heart:

HOPE IS AN AXE.

Hope is not a lottery ticket you can sit on the sofa and clutch, feeling lucky. It is an axe you break down doors with in an emergency.

Rebecca Solnit, Hope in the Dark: The Untold History of People Power

I’m a big fan of hope. I’ve thought about, cultivated, and written about it often (you can read those posts here, here, and here). But I’d never thought of hope in such a forceful way, like a weapon to cut through the morass of doubt, fear, and cynicism that surrounds us. It changes hope from a fragile, ephemeral feeling to a rugged, dependable tool.

That perspective on hope is mirrored in the response author, actor, and musician Nick Cave gave to a fan who presented him with a question I’m sure many of us have asked ourselves:

“Do you still believe in us human beings?”

Nick’s answer paints a sharp-edged view of hope:

Much of my early life was spent holding the world and the people in it in contempt. It was a position both seductive and indulgent. The truth is, I was young and had no idea what was coming down the line. It took a devastation to teach me the preciousness of life and the essential goodness of people. It took a devastation to reveal the precariousness of the world, of its very soul, and to understand that the world was crying out for help. It took a devastation to understand the idea of mortal value, and it took a devastation to find hope.

Unlike cynicism, hopefulness is hard-earned, makes demands upon us, and can often feel like the most indefensible and lonely place on Earth. Hopefulness is not a neutral position — it is adversarial. It is the warrior emotion that can lay waste to cynicism.

Each redemptive or loving act, as small as you like — such as reading to your little boy, showing him something you love, singing him a song, or putting on his shoes — keeps the devil down in the hole. (Hope) says the world and its inhabitants have value, and are worth defending. It says the world is worth believing in. In time, we come to find that this is so.

Nick Cave

When you feel torn by the strain of the world, when people around you surrender to their shadow side, when cynicism sings its siren song, set your feet. Reach down deep. Heft the axe of hope. Slam its love-hardened blade into your anger, your despair, your fear. If you do, the sun will blaze through the rend in the darkness, and you’ll take another step toward Becoming Yourself.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2025 Becoming Yourself

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑