5 Minimalism Blind Spots You May Be Missing

Today’s guest post comes to us from Brett Oblack of Step 1 Minimalist

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I’m going to guess that most of you reading this article have tried to simplify your life as much as possible or are at least interested in the minimalism lifestyle.

Even for those of us who have been minimalists for awhile, there are still some sneaky areas in our daily lives that can fly under our radars. Let’s examine these sneaky blind spots and shed some light on them.

1) Computer Hard Drives. If you are like most computer users these days you probably have a huge hard drive and an even larger external hard drive. And yet I’d imagine you spend the majority of your computing time online, in the cloud. How much of what is on your hard drive(s) is actually necessary to your goals in life? All of that music (a fraction of which gets listened to regularly), those “questionably obtained” movies and long-obsolete programs can clutter up a hard drive without warning. It is so easy to ignore it and rationalize that at least it isn’t physical clutter. But slogging through a bloated start-menu or being unable to find any of your files are just as antithetical to minimalism as crowding our homes with unnecessary possessions.

2) Newsreaders. There are millions and billions of websites on our beloved interwebs. How many of them are filling up your newsreader? Are you wasting time looking at LOLcats and celebrity gossip or are the items you read everyday aligned with your goals in life? Find websites to support that are actually contributing to your personal growth. By maintaining fewer items in your reader you can better absorb and apply the content to your own life.

3) Email and online networking. Do you need to follow a thousand people on twitter? Do you have to “like” every random fan page your friends suggest on Facebook? How many of these things are providing any real value compared to the number of them that are just taking up more of your attention. Spend your time connecting and networking with the people in your niche or professional industry and not catching up with everything Ashton Kutcher tweets about.

4) Netflix, DVRs, Hulu, etc. Much has been written about reducing the time spent in front of the television, and for good reason. Millions of dollars are spent each year on commercials designed to get people to buy products they don’t need. “But I have a DVR!” or “I only use Netflix!” That’s a step in the right direction, but take a lot at your queue. Is it filled with 200 movies while you add more each day? 200 movies would be roughly 300 hours or over 12 straight days worth of viewing. Is that ever going to actually fit into your busy schedule? Kill the bloat and get things back to a manageable level. After all, those old Star Trek episodes will always be there later if you decide you truly want to watch Captain Kirk romance alien women again one day.

5) Your Health. Your body is the most important possessions you get and you can’t upgrade it for a better model. Sometimes we get so focused on clearing the clutter away from the rest of our lives that we forget to focus on what goes into our bodies. Even taking small steps like reducing the red meat in your diet or starting a commitment to a simple weight loss program can make a huge difference in your personal health.

Can you think of anymore minimalism blind spots I missed?

[photo credit]

Thanks goes out to Brett Oblack of Step 1 Minimalist for this great article.

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  • We are definitely on the same wavelength here. Even the unseen clutter can drive me batty! Even the "behind the monitor" clutter on my computer will make me crazy after a while.

    Aside from technology, recently I've been exhausted by the "diet plans" I keep seeing. They exhaust me because they're so darn complicated! In my attempts to simplify my life AND diet, the last thing I need is a diet plan that calls for a different dish 5 times a day, 7 days a week! And when you look at the recipes, they have 10, 12, 15 ingredients! No... give me a can of black beans, some celery, onions, and garlic and I've got soup, baby! I can eat that every day for a month just to keep my mind from spinning with all these diets!

    Anyway, there are a lot of confusing, busy, complicated, messy things in our lives. Anything I can un-complicate is great! Thanks for the great post!
  • bridanp
    If Brett had put point #2 at the bottom, probably would have had his blog added to my reader before I finished reading. Now I feel compelled to remove one subscription before I add his blog.

    Like that Belvedere idea in the comments, too. Thanks for the great post!
  • Ha, thanks Brian!
  • As I was reading through your post (good job, Brett), I was rather proud of myself -- for awhile. On points 1-4, I'm doing fine. I don't download music or much of anything, I limit email and newsreaders and I don't own a DVR or subscribe to Netflix. (I don't even have cable TV.)

    But point 5 is the problem. I don't take a very minimalist approach to eating. I'm trying, but I'm not there yet. I don't talk about food, eating and health much on my blog because I don't feel I have much to say on that topic, but I think I need to start.

    So I'm doing pretty good -- except I'm leaving out a big, huge, major piece of the puzzle.
  • It is definitely a big piece of the puzzle. Luckily, even small daily steps in the right direction make a big difference.
  • I just want to say for those people who have trouble keeping their desktops minimalist, automate the process with a file manager. There's Belvedere for Windows (http://lifehacker.com/341950/b..., Hazel for Mac (http://www.noodlesoft.com/haze... and Scheduled Tasks for Linux (sudo apt-get install gnome-schedule).

    These allow you to create rules for certain files and folders. For example, when I'm in OS X, any file in my Downloads folder that hasn't been opened in 12 hours gets sent to the trash.

    One of the best ways to get your computer at least superficially minimalist is to kill all the desktop icons. In Mac OS X, you can do this by opening a terminal and typing:

    defaults write com.apple.finder CreateDesktop -bool false

    then:

    killall Finder

    You'll still be able to save things to the desktop, but they will only appear in the Finder folder for the desktop and not on the actual desktop. And of course, you could set Belvedere or Hazel or gnome-schedule to automatically move anything on the desktop.

    Great post, Brett!
  • I totally agree about the desktop icons. Maybe it is just me, but I don't even look at my desktop hardly.

    In addition to Belvedere, Revo Uninstaller is a good choice for cleaning up unused programs.
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