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Harsha Agarwal

Omit the Needless


Once upon a time, when we were kids, we always lured on what others had and either wanted the exact object or a better version of it. With the rise in our demands as time passed, we were introduced to the term capitalism where momentary peace became the statue of defining our lifestyle. Even now if something lures our eyes, we would want it; and to add a cherry on the cream – if that object goes on sale! What if this deal does not pop again? I can gift this to someone later, or will it look good on the mantlepiece of the master bedroom? But have you ever asked yourself why you would need another mantlepiece when you already have one? Why would you need another set of cutleries when you have a set of blue china? Maybe because we want to stay in the run? The answer is simple – to satisfy your wants of having better than the others around you. 


While minimalist aesthetics and products and the minimalist lifestyle appeals to a lot of people, they find it easier to like it than to live it. That brings us to the beginning of this topic – omit the needless. As stated earlier, our closets and majorly our lifestyle contains a few too many things which we may never use – it might as well range from a cute strappy top which you might have bought for a “supposedly” vacation that you might go on sometime in the future to fitness equipment that you’ve never used. It also does not mean that you have as little as humanly possible, but that everything you do have counts. 


To be a minimalist, you have to consider the various areas of your schedule where you can cut down, for example – take a look around your room. Is all that you own significant? Would you be able to dispose of things, and keep just the things that truly matter? With the logic of disposal does not come the idea of buying more. It's an exercise in futility to lessen your assets on the off chance that you simply purchase a bundle more. What's significant is being contented with life, not materials, and along these lines lessening your necessities. On the off chance that you don't utilize purchasing to satisfy your necessities, you'll just truly buy what you need.


Minimalism is based on the concept of Zen, whose basic idea is mindfulness. How is a cluttered workspace or a mind filled with 101 to-do tasks going to free you? So remember, do less but whatever you do make it count. Start by taking one day at a time. Focus on what makes you happy and note it down. Everything has a time frame, hard work or smart work that’s up to you; but do not put yourself in a notion of complete chaos, and if you do, take a deep breath and try answering all of your questions which provide you with peace. Remember, a thousand-mile journey begins with just one step.


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