25 November 2013

The Necessary Art Of Subtraction



Follow Roger Cummiskey





The tendency of our lives, businesses, art, is to keep adding: more furniture, clothes, gadgets, tasks, appointments, features to websites and apps, words to our writing.



Continual addition isn’t sustainable or desirable:



Too many things to do means we’re always busy, with no time for rest, stillness, contemplation, creativity, time with loved ones.

Too many things to do means we’re always busy, with no time for rest, stillness, contemplation, creativity, time with loved ones.

Too many things to do means we’re always busy, with no time for rest, stillness, contemplation, creativity, time with loved ones.

Overwhelming customers with choices means they’re less likely to make an actual choice. They’d prefer that we curate the best.

Too many possessions is clutter, visual stress, cleaning, maintenance, debt, less happiness.

Too many tasks makes it harder to focus on any one thing or get anything done.

Too many things we want to learn means we never learn anything well.



Subtraction is beautiful: it creates space, time, clarity.



Subtraction is necessary: otherwise we are overburdened.



Subtraction can be painful: it means letting go of a child.



Subtraction is an art that improves with practice. Subtraction can be practiced on your schedule, task list, commitments list, possessions, reading list, writing, product line, distractions.



What can you subtract right now?





Top image from Imgembed.





This is a cross-post from zenhabits.








Leo Babauta is a simplicity blogger & author. He created Zen Habits, a Top 25 blog (according to TIME magazine) with 200,000 subscribers, mnmlist.com, and the best-selling books focus, The Power of Less, and Zen To Done. Babauta is a former journalist of 18 years, a husband, father of six children, and in 2010 moved from Guam to San Francisco, where he leads a simple life. He started Zen Habits to chronicle and share what he’s learned while changing a number of habits.