Intentionality
As you are going through the process of minimizing the items in your home, I challenge you to not buy any new items (excluding food/toiletry items) until you have minimized everything in your home that you can. Over consumption is something we are fighting against. Just like we cannot spend our way out of debt, we cannot buy our way out of excess.
The next thing I want you to think about is what items (that you currently own) truly bring value to you or your household? You will not be able to answer this for every item right now, but as you begin the process of minimizing this question will make more sense. This is a question that will be constantly asked and answered as we de-clutter our space. Answering this one question, will give you the answer as to whether you should keep or get rid of an item. If the item does not spark a joy in you, a type of excitement; you should be leaning on the side of getting rid of the item. You will begin to notice that you have a lot of items that you either THOUGHT sparked a joy, or that USED to bring you joy. If the item falls into either of those categories, minimize it. Find a better home for it (i.e. sell/donate it). Allow someone else to get joy out of these items. The more we have of something, the less we seem to appreciate it.
We want to be as intentional as possible when making these types of decisions so use the 90/90 rule as your guide.
We are making a determination, right now, based on our past habits from the last 90 days and our future habits in the next 90 days if we will get value from the specific item. If the answer is:
- No/No > minimize it (why? You have not used it and you have no plans to use it)
- Yes/No > minimize it. (why? Because we are clearly stating we no longer have a purpose for this item in our lives, so do not hold on to it)
- Yes/Yes > keep it. (why? You are getting value from the item so no need to minimize items you get value from)
- No/Yes or Maybe > Keep it. (why? You have not gotten the value from the item since you purchased it, but that does not mean you will not get value from it in the near future. I would re-evaluate in the next 90-day period and make a decision from there.)
Some people will say “90 days, that is not enough time to make that type of decision.” Keep in mind, minimalism is NOT a one size fits all. These are just guidelines or recipes to keep you focused and on track and give you the ability to make a sound decision and be successful in your minimalist walk. My modification for this rule is 60 days, so my rule is the 60/60 rule. There are others that have a 120/120 rule or a 180/180 rule. Whatever time span you choose, be consistent. Put an alarm in your calendar to remind you that it is time to re-evaluate. Minimalism is not a one-time thing; just like eating healthy is not a one meal thing. You have to constantly work, evaluate, minimize, repeat.
There is a purpose for everything, and everything has a purpose.









