Ready to return to the Hoard
Jan. 5th, 2005 04:29 pmWow, am I posty today. Guess I am making-up for last week.
In a recent post,
waywardbound talks about returning stuff to the Hoard. No, this is not a WoW reference, it is in fact from Niel Gaiman's American Gods. The idea is a great one to keep in mind during a purge of clutter, and so I was not surprised to find a similar idea in the Clear You Clutter book I mention in my last post.
Karen Kingston, the author, quotes Stuart Wilde's book Infinate Self on how to "Hold on to Nothing." What he calls the God Force could just as easily be the Hoard.
And his advice on spending:
In regards to my resolution to reduce my clutter by 50%, this is something I am going to have to keep in mind.
In a recent post,
Karen Kingston, the author, quotes Stuart Wilde's book Infinate Self on how to "Hold on to Nothing." What he calls the God Force could just as easily be the Hoard.
Everything you have is in the care of the God Force. If you come home and the stereo is missing, you can say "Ah, the've come for the stereo, " rather than getting uptight about it. It's just gone back to the God Force. Somebody else has it now. That leaves space for another stereo to come into your life. Or it leaves space for no stereo at all. Now you'll have the silence to meditate and think about who you are and what you want in this life.
And his advice on spending:
The whole function of money is not to have it; its function is to use it. The main reason for generating money is to buy experiences. You want to get to the end of you live with zilch in the bank, and look back and say. "My God, look at the huge pile of experiences," because none of your memories are ever lost.
In regards to my resolution to reduce my clutter by 50%, this is something I am going to have to keep in mind.