Less Is More

More than twenty years ago when our younger daughter moved out, I turned her eight by twelve bedroom into a home office. It had two desks; one for the desktop computer and one to write and work at. There was a four drawer file cabinet, a bookshelf, and more. It was like a senior executive’s office, where I could receive visitors who could sit across from me at my desk. Naturally, all the file drawers filled up, all the shelf and wall space was occupied with books and mementos. A few years ago I did a big purge, getting rid of one desk, the credenza and several file drawers worth of stuff. We moved in a sleeper sofa that was too big for the room.

It was still too much. For the past two weeks, I’ve been ruthlessly purging files, old memories that I never look at, award plaques that commemorate achievements no one else can appreciate, a drawer full of mismatched cables for computers I no longer own, and a big old printer with more capabilities than I need. We moved the sleeper sofa to the living room, moved my wife’s old recliner into the office/guest room, donated the old sofa and file cabinet to Habitat Restore, and cleaned out the closet.

What’s hard about this is letting go of things I thought I valued. Oh, I kept some of the old letters and writings that I hope my children will read before they toss them. And I kept property and tax records they might need. They might learn that in my three-year Army tour, I was paid a little over three thousand dollars; and in our first year of marriage, Marleen and I made a little less than seven thousand dollars.

As I looked over each item before I threw it away, I asked myself, “Is this worth taking up space in my life?” And, “Will anyone care about this thing when I’m gone”. If the answer was no, I let it go. These “treasures” will have no meaning in eternity.

Matthew 6:19-21 (ESV) “Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal, but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.”

We now have less stuff and less clutter, and we have obtained more space and more comfort. What remains is a quiet, comfortable place for me to read and pray, to pay bills and write, and for a daughter or grandchild to sleep when they visit. It was worth the effort, and a blessing in the perspective it gave to me.

5 thoughts on “Less Is More

  1. In Lee Warren’s devotional, “Finishing Well,” he says: “Three generations from now, most of us will be a nameless face in a (digital) scrapbook that nobody can identify.” I’ll probably being my program about the upcoming “Leora’s Dexter Stories: The Scarcity Years of the Great Depression” with that quote.

    You’ve actually made sure that doesn’t happen through your own compelling “Aimless Life, Awesome God.” Well done!

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  2. You hit a nerve with this one! I’ve started a similar purging several times–and never finished! My fear, I guess, is the danger of throwing out something that just might be needed later–records of historical significance, family history, notes and quotations from various sources that I think that one day I might write about and need. I have, however, donated two pickup truck loads of books to charities. (One of my daughters enforced her rule: If you haven’t picked this book up–other than to dust it–in ten years, what are the chances you’ll EVER use it?!) I liked your two-desk setup: one for the computer and one for writing! I’m still “old school” and like to do initial drafts in longhand!

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  3. Such a wonderful post! There are great lessons learned in letting go. We do make more space for the people and things that we love. As we set our eyes on God and eternity, we see that the space we most need to fill up is within our own hearts…more love, more patience, more kindness.

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