Access > Ownership
From Amazon’s 2-day free shipping to HEB’s curbside grocery pick up, we expend very little energy to instantly purchase anything and everything we need and want. This creates the opportunity for us to own everything we see or impulse shop. What if we decreased the number of items, we feel compelled to own, and allow the access to these same items be the new norm?
In some ways, we are already doing this. Take music for example. Majority of us do not go to the store and purchase CD’s, we pay monthly subscriptions to music streaming services (Apple Music, Pandora, Spotify, etc.) that allow us the access to the music we enjoy. We can follow this same principle with movies, books, tv shows, video games, etc.
The way internet and technology has advanced we can have access to these items and still get value from these items, without owning them. Having the digital access to content decreases the number of physical items we have in our homes. If we have the digital copy of a movie, we no longer need the physical DVD/blu-ray copy. If we have the digital copy of books or we listen to audiobooks, we no longer need to own the physical copy of the book.
I am not against owning movies and books; I am against owning every single movie or book.
This was a hard concept for me because I LOVE movies. I wanted a wall in my house covered in movies. Now, I do not feel that way. I would rather have access to movies and tv show series verse owning the physical copy of them.
Schools are even going to this concept. Many schools have digital textbooks, the homework and assignments are to be turned in online via a school portal. If the new way of learning and absorbing information is in digital format, why continue to purchase the physical item?
Advantages of access over ownership:
- Save money
- Less clutter
- Less items to move
- Less items to take care of and clean
- Less pacifying items
- When traveling, you can still enjoy these things without packing extra items
There is a purpose for everything, and everything has a purpose.
Below is the movie collection I used to have. I had movies everywhere. They were in my room and in a secondary bedroom. I had so many movies they didn’t even fit on my movie rack.
After going through the process of minimizing my possessions and really thinking about which movies I watch the most and which bring me the most joy, my movie collection now looks like this:
The focus going forward is this is the only movie rack I will ever own. If this rack gets entirely full of movies and I want to purchase another movie, I will have to minimize a movie to add my new movie. This type of boundary will force me to be conscious of new blu rays and DVD’s I want to bring into my life. This also puts an emphasis on having access to movies I may want to watch every now and then instead of trying to own them, but never watch them.
There is a purpose for everything and everything has a purpose.









