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maria@literallysimple.com

3 Ways The Stuff You Own Lowers Quality of Life

3 Ways The Stuff You Own Lowers Quality of Life

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Do you wish you had more space in your home? Wonder why you can’t afford the nice things in life, or continually feel like you never have enough time? Perhaps consider that the amount of stuff you own lowers the quality of your life.

Don’t have enough time to read this 4 minute post? Listen to it below!

Stuff You Own Lowers the Quality of Life
The Stuff You Own Lowers the Quality of Life

Minimalism is for Messy People Too

3 Ways the Stuff You Own Lowers the Quality of Life

Even though I practice minimalism, I’m not a naturally organized person. I don’t enjoy color coding tabs in folders, or organizing and categorizing the miscellaneous cosmetics found in my bathroom. In my room growing up you could find an embarrassing large heap of clothes, toys, books, and trinkets.

Because I’m messy is precisely why I found minimalism. I simply could not keep up with all the stuff I had collected into adulthood. I realized that the unintentional stuff you own lowers the quality of your life. Next week’s post includes ways to solve these challenges and create more time, space, and money.

How the Stuff You Own Lowers the Quality of Your Life

1. Less Time Lowers the Quality of Life

The first way the stuff you own lowers the quality of your life is with time. Anything you bring into your home will cost you time. It will cost you time to look for it at the store, buy it, organize it and store it.

Last summer I decided to host a garage sale. It took me at least a whole afternoon to price everything. Then a whole day to sit at my garage sale. Then another couple hours loading up my car with all the stuff that I didn’t sell and donating it. It was in my mind a complete waste of time, and not even close to profitable. Instead, gate keep future useless objects from entering your home.

2. Less Money Lowers the Quality of Life

Going to the store, working to make the money, and storing your stuff all takes time of course. However, did you ever think about how much money all of that stuff you bought costs? Obviously when you’re buying excess stuff constantly you are spending your well earned money. Specifically all the money that was wasted on stuff you never found useful, only used once, or now just takes up space in your garage?

Your personal finances are affected by how much stuff you purchase out of habit. Think like a wealthy person instead. “Is this an investment or will it depreciate?” Of course, not everything will be an investment in money. Something that saves you time, or gives you quality memories can be considered an investment, even if it costs you money. So don’t turn into a stingy miser, but instead be intentional with your purchases. What will this bring to my life? Is it worth it?

3. Less Space Lowers the Quality of Life

A smaller home can actually be better for you. However, a large home is usually what is wanted by most. Why? Of course for space, but perhaps also to serve our egos. When we bought our first home I remember feeling a little bit bitter. We bought below our means, which was smart, but I also felt like I didn’t have enough space. Space for what? Space for random stuff I wanted to fill my house with of course!

When you have less stuff you start to recognize all the space you have in your home. I walk into rooms now with large pockets of empty space, as all the excess clutter has been cleared. My closet is now large enough because I simply have less clothes. In fact, we have more than enough space and have found our home to be the perfect size for us. Plus, the added benefit of a low mortgage payment.

Final Thoughts

Literally Simple - Be more, Want Less, Gain Quality
Literally Simple – Be more, Want Less, Gain Quality

If you’re feeling overwhelmed, constantly rushing, or living paycheck to paycheck in too small of a home, consider incorporating minimalism habits. With this “Literally Simple” solution you don’t have to seek a larger home, get a new job, or completely clear your schedule. You don’t have to get rid of all your possessions and live on a bus next week either. Minimalism, decluttering, and tidying can be added into your routine easily with a few simple habits. Check out next week’s post for guidance and a kick start into decluttering your home, time management, and personal finances.

You might also like a list of clothing items, items for my toddler, and home products I no longer buy or bring into my home to start gate keeping your own home.

Join the Discussion

What room in your home needs the most decluttering? Where would you love to see empty space? How could you “declutter” your schedule to have more time doing things you love? What unnecessary purchases are you making?

P.S. I always ask readers to follow me on InstagramPinterest and Facebook. I consciously try to document my everyday simple life. Since we happen to be on a debt free journey, it can be motivating because most of my activities are intentionally inexpensive. However, if you’re trying to cut out social media, you’ll need to subscribe directly to this blog.

Author

Maria Halcumb
Maria Halcumb

-Maria Halcumb
B.A. in Secondary Education, English, and Physical Education
M.A. Ed. in Curriculum & Instruction and Reading Specialist

 

18 Responses

  1. Jordan says:

    This inspires me to clean out my closets. I am pinning it to my pinterest.

  2. We have been in our new house for a year. Our old house was 1520sqft and I didn’t feel we had enough space for all of our “stuff.” Now, our current home is twice as big and we have kitchen and bathroom cabinets with nothing in them. We have enough space – on purpose. I didn’t realize how much “stuff” we have until we had to pack up and move. So much was thrown away. We have only purchased a few new items to fill some spaces, but those were necessary – like bedroom furniture. 😉

    • admin says:

      Hi Natashia,
      Isn’t it amazing how much stuff we collect and how that affects our happiness with our home? Good for you! Keep gate keeping and you’ll have a wonderfully spacious home!

  3. I have been wanting to declutter for so long, and this is a great motivation to go through my things!

    • admin says:

      Hi Shayla,
      It really is! We often don’t think about the amount of time, space, and money our clutter takes from us. 🙂

  4. thehotmessmomlife1 says:

    This makes me want to go through and throw out all the junk we don’t need! My house definitely needs it!

  5. Hmm I think I could free more time by setting a time limit on Instagram and Facebook. I get stuck scrolling.

  6. Teya Miller says:

    My biggest annoyance right now is feeling like I have to FILL my house with stuff! We just bought our house and already people are talking about what I could buy and put it where. I try to be patient because we’re young and I want to fill my house with stuff that is meaningful to ME. This will happen in it’s own time and I refuse to let be rushed! Awesome post!

    • admin says:

      Excellent point Teya. It really seems to be the normal, and you kind of have to gate keep until quality items enter your home. Good luck!

  7. Lenee' says:

    I have really enjoyed the thought of minimalism and even Marie Kondoed my life a little and believe this is 100% true and simply hard to instill in my day to day life! Good reminder. Thanks

  8. Jes says:

    This is so true! We have so much stuff we don’t need. It’s time for a good decluttering! Thanks for sharing!

  9. Annie says:

    I enjoyed reading this 🙂 I’m so on board with your points. I have become much more intentional with my purchases. I try to think about where the item is going to end up. I am regularly traveling to the Goodwill with a bag of stuff and I think that helps me see how stuff ultimately is no longer useful or wanted, so I try to really focus on it’s eventual fate before buying it. Looking forward to next week’s post!

    • admin says:

      I’ve loved reading and relating to your posts as well Annie! Exactly, now I can really start to reduce the amount of stuff I purchase in the first place, since I know its ultimate destination.

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