Mastering the Art of Ambling Into Minimalism

The 3 principles I used to free myself from excess stuff without making it a burden on the planet

Andrea Hoymann
Forge

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Photo by Alyssa Strohmann on Unsplash

Moving house is one of the rare occasions in life when we are brought face to face with the reality of all our belongings — right down to the contents of the bottom kitchen drawer.

After a few days of wrapping Ikea glasses and packing boxes, I was ready to throw everything I owned away. And not just the random buckets of used-only-once cleaning products. I was also reevaluating the need for the things I genuinely loved, like the artworks I had bought on holidays and the books that would immediately start gathering dust again once placed back onto their relocated shelf. It all seemed like too much. Too much stuff to pack. To carry. To unpack. To maintain.

My partner and I talked about making a sea change for years. We wanted to leave life in Sydney behind for a simpler, lighter existence a little further up the coast. Now it was finally time to leap. Yet, here I was: Sitting on the floor of the half-empty apartment, feeling like the things we owned, owned us.

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Andrea Hoymann
Forge
Writer for

German expat in Australia | writes about sustainability, travel, work & life | head of strategy at brandchemistry.com.au