Note: I am not the author of this text. This post was originally submitted to /r/simpleliving on Reddit by /u/penartist, who has given me permission to repost it here.


Someone asked me the other day what simple living meant to me. The title was my response. Simple living is “crafting a life I don’t need a vacation from, that allows me to live in alignment with my values.”

I find a lot of people have this notion that you need to minimize how much you work in order to live a simple life. My personal experience has been that crafting a life you don’t need a vacation from can happen even when you work 40 hours a week. It is a mater of prioritizing how you spend your time outside of work.

Exercising and getting enough sleep are important as these two things can set your mood for everything else. Not overscheduling yourself and leaving lots of room for downtime. It is ok to have nothing to do. I also found that removing things that were time sinks was most helpful. It’s easy to spend a few hours in front of a tv screen, scrolling the internet, watching YouTube videos etc., and feel like you didn’t do anything.

My husband and I have always found a way to live a simple life right where we are. We were careful to not over extend our obligations outside of work so that we have lots of down time and don’t feel like we need a vacation or too escape our day to day lives. We “right sized” our home to a small apartment to remove the need for yard work, home maintenance and upkeep. This freed up a huge amount of our time and our energy for things that we want to do. We removed tv from our home as well as it was a time sink and limit screen time.

We go to the farmers market on Saturday mornings and purchase produce for the week. We shop small and local and we cook from scratch. We spent time biking the rail trail and hiking in the state park or the forest near our apartment on the weekends when the weather is good. We read or play cards in the evenings, and we enjoy attending art openings and exhibitions, and live theater performances done by our local theater company on occasion. We listen to LPs and podcasts while creating art and I also enjoy knitting.

  • inasabaOPM
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    1 year ago

    I think knowing your core values is so important. Over the years on /r/simpleliving, I have seen hundreds of people asking the same questions:

    • where should I move to to live simply?
    • what kind of job should I take to live simply?
    • should I have kids or not?

    As I wrote in my introduction post, nobody can answer these questions for us. A place or a job that I find simple may not resonate the same way with someone else. I feel like these kinds of questions are typically posed by anchorless people, who don’t know their own core values. They know they are unhappy with their status quo, but can’t identify what they truly desire. All they know is that they want to get away, to try something different.

    Which is why I advocate that people do introspection before they start making big changes to their lives. Only once we know what truly matters to us can we begin to build a life around those things!