12 Unconventional Steps To Become A More Minimalist You

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Minimalism is not only about eliminating unnecessary belongings, it is also about identifying and getting rid of bad habits and toxic relationships. Begin your journey with these 10 ways to simplify your life.



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Living a minimalist life means eliminating the unnecessary from your life. This will help you to make room in your life for things, people, and experiences that add true value to your life.

You might even imagine how becoming a minimalist will help you to spend much more of your time with the really important things in life. Yet, at the same time, becoming a minimalist can be quite overwhelming.

There are so many things to get rid of, you may not even know where to start with. For this reason, it’s important to take small steps in the right direction.

It’s all about freedom. If you’re more comfortable with having less, you’re less likely to feel a deep craving for the pursuit of more.

Whether that includes reducing the number of things you need to be happy or producing less waste when living your daily life, deciding how you’ll live your minimalist lifestyle is the first step to becoming a minimalist.


Here are some initial step will help you to understand and start minimalism

1.Set your rules for minimalism

Minimalism is different for everyone. Some people define their minimalist lifestyle by only owning a certain number of items.

This process allows you to remove the distractions that come along with owning excessive things, and instead focus on the things and people that are important to you.

2.Use it or lose it

Remember how we learned that minimalism is all about adopting a less is more mentality and only living with the things that you need?

Put that to the test by implementing the Use It or Lose It Rule.

When you find these items, use the Six Month Use It or Lose It Rule. If you haven’t used it at least twice in the last six months, then it’s time to throw it.

Eventually, try to work up to throwing things that you haven’t used in the last three months, and then items from the last month.

And remember, keep only what you need now, not what you think you may need in the future.

3.Bring in less


Once you minimize the number of things you own, make sure that you start to limit what you bring into your home, as well. You didn’t do all this work to be undone by a few impulsive shopping sprees.

Try removing one piece of clothing from your closet for every new item that you purchase. Set yourself a spending limit for new items each month.

4. Assess your life. Set priorities

This step is so important that it must not be neglected. What you want to do during this assessment of your life is to identify what’s most valuable and important to you.

Find out what elements of your life add the greatest value, happiness, and meaning to your life. Doing so will help you to set your priorities straight.


With a clear understanding of what’s truly important to you, it’s much easier to begin the process of minimizing.

Prioritizing helps you to understand the benefits of making room in your life for the essentials.

Write down the most important things in your life and concentrate on these first. Focus on gradually making more room in your life for your priorities.

5. Evaluate your properties.

Think about everything you own and find out if these things align with your priorities.

Figure out if the things you own add value to your life or if they simply distract you and create mental noise.

It’s often difficult to admit, but the evaluation of your properties may highlight that you own far too many things of little to no value.

Organize a list with all your properties that are redundant and no longer of value to you. Start slowly by eliminating one or two of these things per week.

6. Evaluate how you spend your time.

Ask yourself the question if the activities you engage in add value to your life.

Doing so will help you to spend less time with unproductive or even time-wasting activities. This will give you the freedom of having more time for the activities you enjoy.

Look at everything you do and every activity you regularly engage in. Write down how much time you spend on more or less purposeless activities.

Identify if your commitments are in line with your priorities. Once you’ve got a good understanding of how you spend your time, see if you can reduce unbeneficial activities.

Start slowly by addressing the most pressing issues, one at a time. It’s better to rid your life once and for all of one negative activity.

7. Evaluate who you spend your time with.

The people you spend most of your time with have a great influence on your life.

It’s therefore only logical that you want to nurture relationships with positive and encouraging people.

At the same time, minimalism is about identifying people who are nothing else but toxic.

Identify the people who drain your energy and waste your time. Start by spending less time with those who do nothing but drag you down and discourage you from pursuing your dreams.

8. Stop multitasking.

Many people believe in it and pride themselves on being excellent multitaskers.

All you do is the switch from one activity to another, which can drastically decrease your productivity.

Don’t clutter your workflow and life by pursuing various activities simultaneously. Instead, focus on doing only one thing at a time.

Eliminate distractions and try to overcome the temptation to multitask.

“Single-tasking” will help you to be more productive in what you do. It increases your concentration and will have a dramatic impact on the output of your work.

9. Evaluate your goals and ambitions.

Our goals and ambitions greatly shape the lives we are living. But not all goals are beneficial.

Question if the race of your goals will add true value to your life. Take yourself time to reflect upon the outcome of your goals.

Don’t clutter your life with a wide variety of goals that you pursue only halfheartedly.

Focus on setting yourself a limited number of goals and pursue these with your greatest attention and application.

You could even go so far as to minimalize to only one goal. It will help you to greatly reduce stress and to concentrate on the goal with the highest priority.

10. Start small.

If you set yourself the ambitious goal to de-clutter your entire house or flat within two weeks, you might be overwhelming yourself.

Instead, start small and work yourself gradually towards a more simple living.

Instead of purging an entire room, focus on smaller areas of the room instead.

Do one area at a time until the entire room is less cluttered and more minimalistic.

11. Live freely.

Try not to blame yourself for what happened in the past and try to stop worrying about the future.

When you live in the past or the future, you deprive the present moment of its joy and power.

Realize that you can neither make things that happened in the past undone nor can you influence what happens in the future.

Instead, use the present to build the fundament for a brighter future. Similarly, use the experiences/mistakes you’ve made in the past as important lessons. Living more deliberately will help you to spend your time in a more valuable and meaningful manner.

12. Limit screen time and media consumption.

The time we spend on technological gadgets adds unnecessary noise to our lives. Similarly, the thoughtless consumption of media adds more complexity than it helps to simplify.

The more time you spend with media, the more influence it will exert over your life. If media consumption dominates your life, your thoughts and actions will be dominated by it as well.

This is especially difficult if your thinking is still greatly influenced by the media.

There’s only one way to discover the negative impact of all these things on your life, which is by consequently eliminating them from your life.

It’s relatively easy to shrug the above off as nonsense if you’re still heavily influenced by media. But you will be amazed at the profound difference disconnecting and turning things off can make.

Does this help to live more minimalistic?

If you can do this, your buying habits will greatly change. This in turn will help you to avoid de-cluttering your life in the first place.

So whenever you’re going to meet a decision, ask yourself if it will help you minimalize or if it simply adds unnecessary noise.

Pose yourself the question if the decision you’re going to meet will simplify your life or not.



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