Great talk. Thank you. Key thoughts: 1. Stuff makes us feel safe. 2. Stuff gives the illusion of permanence. 3. The Marketing Machine tells us we should have/keep/get more stuff. 4. We’re worth more than how society values us, which is how much we contribute to the economy. 5. Become a “conscious keeper”. 6. Donate your stuff. 7. Be honest about all of the costs of storage. 8. The relief of finally being liberated from stuff. 9. We are all “renting” in this life - we “own” nothing. 10. What happens when you are free of stuff - apartment in Blois overlooking the Loire, etc. 11. Realize that the stuff that we keep in our lives affects how we live our lives.
@cookieeverydaylife67462 жыл бұрын
Thanks Dave for make it simple for the keynotes
@contagiousintelligence50072 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@juliaevans9521 Жыл бұрын
9 resonated strongly with me, especially as I often feel "less" than my siblings because I never bought a home (especially now I rent so called 'social housing')
@letthelovework9662 ай бұрын
17 minutes in still awaiting substance!!! :-(
@micalthegal8 жыл бұрын
I am a stuff person, I love beautiful things. my husband is an experience person. We have a big house and one day he requested to be located to a different state and his boss agreed. We sold the house and almost everything we had... and took a break in the transition. 6 weeks living in Europe, with only 25L backpack each. Laundry each night and live so simple in hotels, airbnbs, we realize we could live only with a few shirts, socks, underwear, a smartphone and a boiling water pot for tea. It changed our lives forever, I no longer enjoy the mall and looking at/buying stuff but now enjoy spending time that promotes experience. Great talk!
@amor28747 жыл бұрын
Alice S what an absolute gift that you were able to have such an experience!
@saionarareis40826 жыл бұрын
Wow! So proud of you. It must be wonderful to get to such an epifany.
@AGM-ts5bb6 жыл бұрын
Alice S Thank you for sharing that. It really us exciting and I am not being sarcastic. Life is for living.
@gerardinebetancourt12466 жыл бұрын
THANKS for telling your story
@desiray45246 жыл бұрын
Love this! Thanks for sharing story!!
@mariekatherine52385 жыл бұрын
Realized a few years ago I had accumulated too much stuff in my apartment, plus the place was too big since my son moved out. I found a rented room walking distance to work, for literally a quarter of the price, that included utilities. I sold several collections of books, glasswear, art, four bicycles, donated lots of clothes and furniture, etc. Then I put everything in my SUV in two eight-mile round trips and moved! My life is so much better. I'm neither a hoarder nor a minimalist. I still have numerous footwear, books, etc. The difference is that I wear and read them, not just have them for the sake of having them! Let other people enjoy the books, the glasswear, and art. Like you, I also had a health issue that has improved with downsizing. I walk or ride my one bike to work three of five days a week, weather permitting. I come home to my micro-kitchen and cook the pre-planned dinner for the day. I buy food no more than two days ahead. Cleaning takes about 30 minutes per week! I've more time to pursue hobbies, go to museums, parks, or just curl up with music and a book. Everyone should periodically evaluate how they are living. Do your living conditions suit your life situation? If not, determine what will be a better fit and make changes accordingly. You won't regret it!
@survivoronamission28892 жыл бұрын
But Marie, you ARE a minimalist - you evaluated your life and the ways in which it no longer served you, took action (spreading a lot of blessings for others by pushing on the opportunity to have that rush of getting something new, different, maybe even special), and now you live your life purposefully. You've made it for your needs, and find value in that which you kept and choose to bring into your home and life. That's like minimalism defined! ❤️
@skooliecarol8542 Жыл бұрын
You go girl
@marknorthern82658 жыл бұрын
The "stuff" vs. "experiences" contrast would be an interesting topic for a children's book. Kids today are sucked into the consumerism vortex at such an early age.
@ElizabethODulemba8 жыл бұрын
+Mark Northern I agree, Mark! Hmmm, must think on this... :) e
@hwaner18 жыл бұрын
write that shit. should be easy enough. do it.
@Starry_Night_Sky74556 жыл бұрын
Mark Northern yes but if it's a book that is *stuff* LoL!!!!
@saionarareis40826 жыл бұрын
I totally agree. I think it should be addressed at school. But then we would have to have the teacher’s mindset changed.
@stellaqaustralia6 жыл бұрын
I’d read it - then pass it on 😀👍
@daintyDeniss6 жыл бұрын
Great talk but I'd like to point out something else - your husband! He seems so cool. He kept track of your deepest dreams and desires and he was there to help you make the big decision which surely influenced his life enormously. It's amazing to have such person around, someone who reminds us who we can become while we're not there yet, someone who doesn't let us forget and lose ourselves. I believe you are grateful for him. Stay happy :)
@anitac.94116 жыл бұрын
Amazing, indeed!
@kbld15 жыл бұрын
Good point. My husband's main concern is his work and its all he does. 29 years later I can count on one hand things we've done that are non-work related or time spent together. I now realize I should have left, but always thought things would change and felt strongly about my vows. To any young woman a few years into a marriage where there is no/little forward movement - take my advice: run, as fast as you can.
@cheypam5 жыл бұрын
@@kbld1 18 years in, wishing I had run...
@deborahthomas90075 жыл бұрын
Cq
@deborahthomas90075 жыл бұрын
W
@justfromg4 жыл бұрын
Sometimes I treat stores as art galleries - I walk around and enjoy looking and studying something but I don't need to keep it in my home.
@karenpage56743 жыл бұрын
I’m doing the same now. We travel with a club. Lunch in a tourist shopping small town destination. I look but seldom buy, maybe a bar of custom soap if I’ve used up last one before. We were walking out of a kitchen store, ladies walking in astounded we were able to leave without buying anything. Easy I don’t need another gadget, fun to look at and sometimes figure out use.
@caso64812 жыл бұрын
Me too!
@ckgibson172 жыл бұрын
I walk through Tiffany’s as if it’s a museum.
@deltahomicide93002 жыл бұрын
Me too even tho the clerk at the high end speaker store makes a face every time I walk in lololol
@annettegustafson14352 жыл бұрын
Sweetie, that's called window shopping
@chrish91555 жыл бұрын
This lady had a beautiful soft pleasant voice!
@forthenextgenerationacts17625 жыл бұрын
True 👌
@janmalone86415 жыл бұрын
This has to be the most comatose audience ever seen. Kudos for pressing forward with grace ! I appreciate you !
@msheart25 жыл бұрын
Let us know when Bill & Melinda Gates the Trumps, the VAtican give up their " stuff" .
@elizabethjohnson59655 жыл бұрын
Great talk it spells - Freedom! And our stuff cannot hug us or kiss us good night! Let go and get livinging your life! See the world🌎
@thelavenderdancer5 жыл бұрын
Comatose 😂 perfect word choice
@traceybeatty58505 жыл бұрын
This talk took place in Edinburgh. Scottish people tend to be more reserved and less effusive.
@VampFlirt5 жыл бұрын
But, still....NO laughter? Were they even awake? These TED Talks are usually more "interactive"....and Scottish people DO have a sense of humour....not even a head nod of understanding...they just sat there like statues!🙄 Kudos to her for soldiering on & not allowing the dullness of the room to dampen her enthusiasm or humour!
@zachhorton158 жыл бұрын
She is a definition of a minimalist. Minimalism is streamlining your material possessions so that all of them have specific meaning and/or importance to you and nothing is extra. Keep your book collection, keep your CD collection, if it has specific meaning to you. Just be conscious of what you surround yourself with and what gives you joy.
@ecouturehandmades51666 жыл бұрын
I like your Marie Kondo version, but how do you do it with a companion that 'had to have it' (his stuff) and wants to throw out everything that is yours (pmf, my shite), including the things that I use to make him happy. He lives in my house, but doesn't want to see my stuff. 25 years, bad temper and poor health.
@msheart25 жыл бұрын
She is the definition of the NWO a propagandist. .
@annarehbinder75405 жыл бұрын
G Morgan consider his advice and and get of a lot of your shite gone - kick him out !
@ritah.67525 жыл бұрын
G Morgan, Kick him with his bad attitude and his shite to the curb. You will be much happier with him gone! Then you can have what ever you enjoy out to make you happy! Life is too short to waste precious time with a SOB, when you can use that wasted time on your own ambitions.
@thumbprint71504 жыл бұрын
@@ecouturehandmades5166 - You assert yourself!
@jeffmoodie61442 жыл бұрын
Heh. We went through this a few months ago. 32 years of accumulation. 4 months of shedding, selling, giving away everything. No storage. Four travel bags. We had the “WTF did we just do?” after we got off the plane and were being driven to our first stay in rural Mexico. We walk everywhere, we don’t buy anything that we don’t need. We spend time on the beach. I still work but 100% remotely. Life is great and, while there are some aspects of Canada that we miss, we have no plans on changing this as we realized that it was the stuff that was running our lives.
@Amy-fk5we Жыл бұрын
Good for you guys! I bet you are not missing the cold 🥶 weather right now! I’m in Ontario and winter is never ending.
@maferdash5 жыл бұрын
In Europe is virtually impossible to store too much stuff because big cities density is super high and flats small compared to America. The average professional couple lives in a 55 mt2 flat or 500 ft2. That’s not much to play with. The thing is, it is liberating. In 9 years, I lived in France, Spain and Germany, learnt 2 languages and met hundreds of different people and cultures, including my husband. Now I have a much stable life in Berlin, but the sense of space and cleanliness at home gives me a sense of peace difficult to describe. We do shop in the supermarket every day what we’re going to cook for the following day, we both take our eco tote bag for doing our groceries so we never ever have to pay for bags, which are btw made of paper as plastic bags are banned. Small supermarkets are every 300 mts, filled with fresh food. The vast majority of Europeans in big cities follow this way of life. We don’t have a car, we have great public transport that takes us to our work and we have two amazing bikes that we use often as well. We take for our trips to the lakes on the weekends. Now we’re planning to move to Munich and guess what... we’ve 4 suitcases and two bikes to take with us. We’re now both 37, I’m an MBA with four languages, and my husband holds a PhD in finance. Our home is bit less than 80 mts2, pretty big as we have two full bathrooms!. When I go to the USA I feel so overwhelmed bombarded by the media, sales, stuff... my friends there accumulate so much... I do understand that the pressure for consumption is extreme in the USA, beautiful things everywhere, don’t get me wrong, I’d also love to go to Joe Malone store and spend 1000€ in 5 useless things, but my European mind would never allow me. I’d be really unhappy right after doing such thing. It’s non sense. Living with less opens your life to a broader opportunity to learn around the world, meeting cultures and people. I declutter every 6 months and its cathartic.
@recyclespinning98394 жыл бұрын
I' m jealous. I love bikes and food.
@IExpectedBSJustNotThisMuchBS6 жыл бұрын
I'm an experience person and used to believe I could live out of a backpack. I became a stuff person when I became disabled and essentially a prisoner in my home. At that point, I knew that I needed to surround myself with beauty (or at least what I think is beautiful). I'd always had an eye, which was mainly exercised in second-hand stores, but I lost the ability to make the rounds. I now understand the emotional attachment to things. I enjoy my home and limit what I bring into it, and there's only so much stuff one can fit in a home and still be comfortable. Besides, I don't like waste; I don't believe in redecorating just because my mood or styles have changed. However, after making my home comfortable, I ended up doing like my mother before me when she became ill, I purchased clothes for an imagined me. I never understood what compelled her. We never talked about why she purchased those clothes she'd never have an opportunity to wear. I'm having to become unattached to the picture of the life I'd like to lead and using clothes as a fix for the discomfort I feel at my outer world becoming limited. Purchasing furniture that made my surroundings more pleasant improved my life; purchasing clothes I don't need depletes my account and points the way to lessons I need to learn yet in life.
@KM-nq7ez4 жыл бұрын
Very compelling thoughts... I find myself facing some of the same issues regarding China, dishes, servingware ( beautiful objects) that I’ve collected for all of the beautiful Dinner parties and Holiday-gatherings that I’m going to have “ someday”..... Time to say goodbye-to it all and brace my reality. Wishing you the best in your journey.
@miaschu81752 жыл бұрын
This is the best comment on here, including the rather obvious and formulaic Ttalk. I don't know how poor your health is, but I would look into ways that you can still go out. I became disabled and stopped doing things. I later found, once I became used to living with pain, that I could do more than I realised. Wishing you all the best.
@rachelamundsen82655 жыл бұрын
DO NOT BUY A BIG HOUSE. The truth is you do not need it. More space = buying more furniture to fill it up, paying more for electricity and cleaning lady, more taxes, more mortgage, more repairs, more water to water the big yard etc.
@dark_architect16445 жыл бұрын
You can hire a cleaning lady? Damnnn your rich?!?!
@MissJade7775 жыл бұрын
And that is the truth
@auberjean68735 жыл бұрын
My best friend always used to say, "A house is a lifetime hobby." So true... We don't need a bigger house, we need less junk!
@shelli5234 жыл бұрын
Olga Dragomirova I only want a big house so I can help other children.
@XevLexa4 жыл бұрын
So true!
@lw32696 жыл бұрын
Thank you. I struggle every day with being what I call a "maximalist". The high of shopping for stuff gets replaced with being overwhelmed from managing all the stuff. Someone once said "you don't own stuff, it owns you". So true. Clutter is depressing and taking care of it is stressful. Your talk gives me hope.
@kayseafox5 жыл бұрын
Me too I hate it
@nd45395 жыл бұрын
Tyler Durden, Fight Club
@solarhydrowind2 жыл бұрын
People have lost their memories and grip on what was good in our collective and personal past(s). This minimalistctrend is capitalisms way to create a market for us to eventually buy more, while filling the landfills with beloved memories. Scaring old people who deserve our respect. At the same time, breaks need to be put on accumulating more when I don't need more. But yesteryear is real to me. My home is a home and part museum of my real history. Please don't throw away your history. (I own and cherish children's books my 85 year old parent gave me recently she saved from our family in the previous century, among other treasures!!!)
@wurrirockdesigns78575 жыл бұрын
Great talk. The unappreciative audience took nothing away from your talk. My husband and I began a similar journey but held onto the storage. You have inspired me to free myself of the remaining stuff. Thank you.
@LibbyRoseEmbroidery4 жыл бұрын
It's not that they were unappreciative, it's just a different culture. They listened quietly, which is a sign of appreciation. ;) Many of the expressions she used are not in common use in Scotland (although understandable), and Brits don't live the American dream. Next to no one can afford houses that size. It's also a somewhat less consumerist society. So the 'before' life she referred to wasn't the experience of the audience. There's also a very different humour on this side of the Pond. :)
@mammadingo91654 жыл бұрын
Goodluck
@danarzechula37694 жыл бұрын
I'm thinking the people who would attend this talk are more thoughtful than many others. Maybe that's why their responses were minimalist;)
@TeaPourSixFour3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, tough audience. Maybe they were thinking she was a talking book
@v.dargain16785 жыл бұрын
I've spent most of my life having to do without . Now here's someone from the other side of the fence saying " You haven't missed as much as you think . " I love it !
@katyprice90405 жыл бұрын
She made good sense! There was a time that I recall my father saying to me, "You know, you'd have a lot of money if you didn't travel so much!". I said to him, "You're right, but I have all my experiences, and nobody can ever take THAT from me!". The money wasn't as important to me as it was to him. I loved having my wonderful memories! I really enjoyed your story Elizabeth!
@renaldiwicaksono79258 жыл бұрын
OMG thank you very much. For me, There is two best point on this tedx talk : 1. Are you stuff person or Are you experience person? 2. You can go every where if you have less stuff. Then makes ur self so mobile. Thanks
@Mr3DES6 жыл бұрын
Renaldi Wicaksono bbтхар
@nickylewis62858 жыл бұрын
"Is that lamp gonna cost me a dinner with my husband?" Hahaha, this is so perfect. So true.
@denisemarie61318 жыл бұрын
Is the reason we don't go out to eat more because of my Aunt's lamp?! ;p Else, we pick up a cheese steak and eat it by the light of the lamp..... that's good for now. But this was a great message!
@Rodoriginal1016 жыл бұрын
I`d rather buy a lamp that I can see every day than a dinner that is out of my system few hours later.
@Jana08215 жыл бұрын
Its not too convenient carrying a lamp around in your holdall when you are travelling around collecting amazing experiences.
@Rodoriginal1015 жыл бұрын
@@Jana0821 then imagine something smaller, not a lamp, a piece of jewelry maybe ?
@DanielaClapp5 жыл бұрын
Make a simple dinner at home and look for that favorite lamp used...there is a type of lamp I always wanted, but it's so expensive. I don't have to have it, but I would like it and I am waiting till I can find it used somewhere :) I am in the process of de-cluttering. The hardest things are my children's things, because by giving them up, I feel like losing my babies...but they are just growing up, not dying!!!
@coffeerevival78122 жыл бұрын
Stuff vs. experience. This TedTalk gave me the closure I need from recently loosing all of my belongings due to not being able to pay my storage fee (semi-long story). I knew it was stuff that was just holding me back from my next phase in life. I too want to go back to school for my masters, travel the world, learn languages and live abroad and write many books. I’m glad I clicked play. You are very very very inspiring.😊 So thank you!...BIG THANK YOU!!!
@KitKatToeBeans5 жыл бұрын
“Good health is a gift...not a given” well put.
@jennytaylor41655 жыл бұрын
Your health's your wealth. We need to shed the STUFF. I've just realised I'm listening to this whilst doing some online browsing!!
@askanastasia-realestatecre30695 жыл бұрын
is it a sign for me? we are in escrow buying this big beautiful house.. and now sitting in a garden in Bangkok & finding this randim video to watch.. really strange.. should i walk out before getting all the staff..
@Nancy-pf6ft4 жыл бұрын
Fan-TAS-tic talk. I was an Army brat for 23 years. Moved every 2.5-3 years. “Stuff” became the constant, the security, and my grandmothers’s stuff became comforting and a reminder of wonderful times and unwavering love. I’m 62, and trying to face this down.
@angiegriffin8756 жыл бұрын
I recently had a brain tumour, operated on successfully, we moved house and I retired (read 'no income'). I don't know which of these events changed everything but it (or all of them) did. I no longer visit charity shops and buy knick-knacks and clothing and I no longer wander round towns looking for something to buy as a way to entertain myself.The desire to have, to own, and to fill the house has gone and I can let go of just about anything. I get pleasure from the things we have kept and enjoy colour and pattern around the house but it is not my life any more. It felt like I was trying to fill an empty space and now I realise that the empty space was inside of me. I have had to slow down, take things gently and get enjoyment from the simple things in life and there are plenty of them, I just couldn't see them for all the clutter
@buzzweebee86855 жыл бұрын
So true, the clutter blocks the view.
@svrreservations70235 жыл бұрын
Well said, Angie!
@rachelarmel75475 жыл бұрын
Beautiful and inspiring.. thank you!
@RosyOutlook25 жыл бұрын
Good for you for surviving the tumour. Older people who have been through a health crisis naturally start to get rid of extra and stop purchasing, - however that's not what this " give it all away" agenda is about.
@auberjean68735 жыл бұрын
So many of us try to fill the emptiness inside with objects or try to avoid the Dark night of the soul. I applaud you, Angie, for realizing this and sharing your thoughts. Wishing you wellness.
@marypenn16378 жыл бұрын
My father is dying of cancer and despite his rapidly deteriorating condition, he not only refuses to leave his home for more quality care, but has allowed papers and other "stuff" to literally take over. Your second point: "Stuff gives the illusion of permanence..." was SO very eye-opening to me, and helped to explain WHY he has hunkered down in the midst of it all. As a librarian who follows your web site and appreciates your "Coloring Page Tuesday" illustrations, I'd been looking so very forward to hearing your TED talk and was NOT disappointed! Thank you SO much for sharing!
@louisewatts46855 жыл бұрын
that was exactly what resonated for me.....
@Irene-gq4jr7 жыл бұрын
So inspirational. I want to change my life in some big ways, not move continent but I've finally in my 40s met the man I know I want to spend the rest of my life with. We plan to move in together, me moving to his place first then us both finding a home that works for us. When he speaks of making more storage space I always reply with 'Let's just get rid of things we don't use or need'. I am prepared to get rid of pretty much everything other than the basics I need to function day to day, and a boxful of favourites. He's now pretty much on board with that too, and isn't a clutterbug. When I think of my ex, his home was rammed full of his things and those of his deceased parents, some of it beautiful but much of it worthless (despite the old promise, it'll be worth money some day - it never is) as he discovered when he tried to sell things. It ultimately made us both miserable. I never want to be that person who leaves a guilt legacy of unwanted stuff for someone else to deal with. The more I listen to talks like this the more I realize stuff is only holding my good man and me back from having the life we want. Thank you for sharing.
@dr.christopherjohnson4356 Жыл бұрын
Hello, I hope you're safe over there? I hope this year brings happiness, prosperity, and love all over the world, I would love us to be good friends in honesty and in trust if you don't mind. I'm Doctor Christopher Johnson from San Francisco, California, where are you from if I may ask
@koolkatss48545 жыл бұрын
“The stuff we keep in our lives affects how we live our lives”.....so true.....perfect....Thanks.
@MsGnor7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your talk Elizabeth! I absolutely ADORE my clothes and pretty shoes. Lately though I've been looking at my stuff and feeling weighed down. Cannot believe this is me saying this. I've had overwhelming urge to declutter. Decided to follow the impulse. Getting ready for a wonderful life experience. Your adventure inspired me. This approach is scary and exciting ... and then scary again. Eeeek! Good luck to everyone xxxx
@schmidtandcompany5 жыл бұрын
It's amazing how great it feels when you realize how much you really need and even want. The freedom you get when you surround yourself with experiences instead of collecting things is priceless.
@JOHNEELUND3 жыл бұрын
she is so eloquent. the cherry on top to beginning my journey to give up consumerism. i need and want a change so badly.
@lindaneese35864 жыл бұрын
Have just retired from a 50 hour week job and your talk was exactly what I needed to hear. Finally have time to address the mess and dig out. Your explanation was so lucid and freeing. Thank you
@QuiltingCrow5 жыл бұрын
I have Asperger's and I can't stand having much things around me. Most of my shelves are empty as are my closets and walls. I like it that way. Today that's very trendy, haha.
@lynngrant40234 жыл бұрын
Yay, whoop! Yup it can be all or nothing for folk with Autism.
@TeresaRolfeKravtin8 жыл бұрын
Fantastic, e! My "stuff" moment came when I had two family estates to deal with after two deaths. Imagine dealing with other's stuff that was accumulated for decades and never purged. I admire your courage and dedication to honoring your path. Life experiences can be truly magical if we open ourselves to opportunities and engage them. ❤️
@ElizabethODulemba8 жыл бұрын
+Teresa Rolfe Kravtin That would definitely be a wake-up call! Thank you Teresa! :) e
@onedividedbyzero8 жыл бұрын
Teresa Rolfe Kravtin the same thing scares and awaits me. my mother is hoarder and collects stuff for over 40 years... she is prisoner of all that.. she could live wuality life but she doesnt wants to give up her stuff. i finally accepted that its her choice and responsability. i am not gonna do that kind of mistake
@v.dargain16785 жыл бұрын
That is a bummer . Disposing of a dead family member's accumulated stuff .
@GymClubHouse7 жыл бұрын
0:36 simply INCREDIBLE - the idea that you don't need to own some thing - that thing - for it to have value to you.
@msl51317 жыл бұрын
` Steven Wright & George Carlin both masters of the humor in stuff.
@donnadovico86194 жыл бұрын
Your 100 percent correct. Qe sold a huge farm houses our kids qere gone we gave away so much , took to churchs, then qe rented a kittle house that I swear to you was 1 3rd of rhe sixe of the farm house. I gave books to the nursing homes , After living in the lirtle house a year I went threw stuff again and got read of alot of stuff again . We recently purchased out deeam home 17 hundred square feet its smaller than my rental i am off ooading alot of stuff again, but I am buying all new furniture but I need it . It feels amazing to dpwn size and just have what I need . What makes me happy is my little cat , 2 little dogs, my fish that make me happy I live walking on cool evening on the beach with my dogs I love sitting on my little deck with coffee .with my dogs ,cat on my lap at my side .I love my grandaughter living close who loves to walk on the beach holding nanas hand that makes me passes hapoy she lives ro cuddle on the couch and watch boss baby lol. I love my little life 💛
@deararee8 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I bought my house in 2009 and have been miserable every sense. I'm so house poor that I have to constantly rent rooms to afford it @ only the small cost of my peace and sanity. I been saying for years now I should walk away from my house and everyone keep advising me against it, I have a goal of being a very successful arts and crafts maker in my area. I'm going to sell everything and start over, claim my house back and start a business in the basement. I want my house, peace, sanity and independence back. I have a small child so I can't follow your path but mine is much more clearer. Thank you so much.
@stickerlady17746 жыл бұрын
You sound like me! I love craft making but it requires so much ‘stuff’! ‘Stuff’ is taking over our tiny home there’s no room for us four to literally live, let alone sit down together! Extremely sad!
@skh7706 жыл бұрын
You do it! What other people think (even me lol) is totally irrelevant to what's best for you. And only you know that. Besides finding reliable people as roomies is difficult - always is for me.
@codypolar65936 жыл бұрын
If you can, rent the house out. You will have either income from it, or an appreciating asset, that you can sell if you need to in order to support your 'stuff-free' dream. IMAO
@chriswatson16985 жыл бұрын
@@stickerlady1774 Agreed. Craft DOES require loads of stuff, and to sell it, you have to have customers who want more stuff. Minimalists are the enemy of the potter.
@barbrarosebarbrarose5 жыл бұрын
Just what I needed to hear just as I am selling my home and moving to another state as a temporary stop to care for aging family before starting the 3rd chapter of my life! I have all of this cool antique stuff that feels like such a burden any more to own, let alone have to find new homes for-but as I do, I weigh less as each thing leaves. I realize that in some ways, I’ve been paralyzed by living a “stuff-based” life-style when this whole time I didn’t know I was an “experienced-based” person. Thanks for giving me the language! Great talk Elizabeth!!
@solarhydrowind2 жыл бұрын
Hi barbara rose! I love how you say "I weigh less" as each thing leaves. To use a 21st Century word, you have given me perhaps a way to "gamify" my letting beloved things go!!! I will weigh less!!!!
@crueltyfreesara57407 жыл бұрын
Gee tough crowd! She was fabulous. Great talk. Very inspiring x
@kbld15 жыл бұрын
So true! Was this talk given at midnight and were they all sleeping? Not a peep, a clap or a laugh. Yikes!
@earthcruzer53655 жыл бұрын
Haha this crowd cannot relate they love their stuff
@fmcw435 жыл бұрын
Sorry, she’s in Scotland.! We are dour by nature, doesn’t mean she wasn’t appreciated x
@marilyns84974 жыл бұрын
She's in Edinburgh. The people are quite hard to please.
@marilyns84974 жыл бұрын
@@kbld1 Scottish.
@Cosmic__Atlas5 жыл бұрын
That’s my professor!! She is amazing!!
@williamsnow1123 жыл бұрын
Amazing how?
@Cosmic__Atlas3 жыл бұрын
@@williamsnow112 Well she provides great feedback, she is very sweet. She listens when we have something wrong. She is a great person and professor. I’m lucky to have her.
@williamsnow1123 жыл бұрын
Your lucky to worship a liar? Then God bless.
@Cosmic__Atlas3 жыл бұрын
@@williamsnow112 may I ask why you think that? Lmao
@lizward33907 жыл бұрын
A beautiful speech and beautifully spoken. Thank you for the message.
@infpcore7 жыл бұрын
Last year, I cluttered all of my stuff into boxes. It was weird how I wanted to de-clutter everything! I got the room I imagined, empty and spacious. Then, I found this book a few days ago that explains about a minimalist life. And it clicks. That's me! I never realise how I'm unconsciously doing it. I still have those boxes outside my room and am ready to get rid of it. :)
@lifebeelifebee92147 жыл бұрын
We are moving, and I am selling 80% of what we accumulated for almost 20 years together as a family, and it feels goooood. The new house - as I decided - will be clean and only with things that have meaning, or handmade. I had my garage sale this weekend, and our old house feels so empty. All the pictures, wall hanging, majority of kitchen items.... all went yay! Yet, I just purchased new patio furniture for the new home... so we would not sit on the logs lol I am still thankful for all the good things we can have if we want. I grew up in poverty with one dress to wear in my childhood.... I won't the stuff take over my life, I know that, but still enjoy my stuff )) OK does this make any sense..?
@andreacosta37276 жыл бұрын
Great talk! Your experiences as a teacher, a writer and an illustrator lightened up the way you beautifully delivered this talk. Thank you! 7:08 "We all have two lives. The second life starts when we realise we only have one." - Tom Hiddleston. Why do we keep stuff? 8:21 1) Stuff makes us feel safe. 8:58 2) Stuff gives us the illusion of permanence. 9:29 3) The Marketing Machines tell us we should. "The stuff that we keep in our lives affects how we live our lives." Elizabeth Dulemba.
@renewedmind48135 жыл бұрын
You have helped me more than you'll ever know!!!!! You are such an Inspiration 💖
@ShelbySteele238 жыл бұрын
My husband and I had been saving to buy a house but we decided to rent in the meantime and Im so glad we did because I realized how much I hate it. Its a lot of work to keep clean, encourages me to buy more stuff and a lot of wasted space that we are paying for but not using. So we've decided to move back into an apartment and possibly look into buying a condo in a few years. I really want to travel the world so I dont want to be bogged down with a 30 year mortgage so this is just the validation I needed. Great talk!
@Raphaellaji8 жыл бұрын
This made me so emotional and I was so touched the whole time. I've been meaning to get tid of the clusters getting in my way and piles of clothes waiting to be sorted and let go of. I think I had doubts that I might regret making the choice to throw things out and miss them later on...I am really inspire to get on with it now starting with my kids clothes
@jan-mareew62344 жыл бұрын
I am so glad to hear someone talk about the way I live. No technology, no great furniture, no closets full of shoes or clothes, just because I like the way they look. I do not place any value on material objects, but I do place a lot of value on my day to day experiences. I don't even go out with friends for the occasional coffee, why would I, when I have coffee at home???
@mikehobson46928 жыл бұрын
Nice talk. myself and my wife sold everything we had, left our jobs and traveled around the world. Mostly air BNB we didn't rough it daily. People still say why would you do that you could have bought a car or a house. I can tell you it was the best decision ever made. Experiences we can share a lifetime. Do you remember the experience of buying your last pair of jeans or car?
@lornayoung69478 жыл бұрын
Mike Hobson good for!!! I went back to school after age 67!
@leahleigh85148 жыл бұрын
Roisin Because to each their own.
@merlegoode77427 жыл бұрын
Roisin I'm
@debrafries31157 жыл бұрын
Roisin h
@ArtLenLa7 жыл бұрын
LOL it's kind of hard to forget those experiences of buying cars.
@olenabi2 жыл бұрын
Moving to another house/city/country can be truly eye opening. Within a couple of years, I had to move from my parents' home to my first small apartment, then in some time to another apartment and then to a different country to live permanently. Wow, this experience showed me how much unnecessary stuff people keep around and don't even realize it. My mom's life slogan is ''never throw away anything'', I guess she was the one influencing my mindset earlier in life. Now I can feel my ways are changing, I'm becoming more aware of the things I'm bringing into my home. I don't want to clutter my space anymore and feel much better with less stuff. Thank you for the speech. Edinburgh is one of my top places to visit.
@rebekahpagedesigns5 жыл бұрын
I started my "second life" a year ago after a serious concussion... none of us are promised tomorrow! Coming a bit too close to not having tomorrow or the possibly of not being able to remember any of my tomorrows has definitely changed my outlook on life. It's not that I didn't know, in theory, that I was finite - it's that I hadn't been forced to face it.
@auberjean68735 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Elizabeth! I remember the happiest time of my life--college--when I only had what I could fit in my car. Our dreams are more important than stuff...
@v.dargain16785 жыл бұрын
The experience of the journey gives more of a sense of accomplishment than having "stuff" . It took me a while to figure it out , but I finally did .
@auberjean68732 жыл бұрын
@@v.dargain1678 that's good! I learned that lesson young and conveniently forgot it for a time.
@GFWMOMOF27 жыл бұрын
I am 54 married with 2 sons..ages 22 and 15......I have spent most of my life caring for others....raised modestly, in same city I still live in Savannah Georgia...... my modest home is 6 years away from being paid off......thinking that my youngest is almost grown, and they can call this home theirs, it will free us up to maybe travel some.. not financially able to yet, but knowing my kids have a home, creates a door for me to feel a sense of freedom......stuff has been my problem.....it's difficult to let go.....great talk.
@thumbprint71504 жыл бұрын
A terrific talk about how the speaker changed her life. In the process getting rid of most of her property which she felt was holding her back from the changes she wanted to make. It is not a talk about decluttering. She was also fortunate in having a life partner who supported her choices and helped he to implement them.
@GreyLady196 жыл бұрын
Three years ago I lost everything I owned when the flat I rented burnt down. It was has changed my life and the way I look at "stuff" forever. I realised that you do not need much to get by. Letting go of your stuff makes so much space in your life to focus on the things that really matter to you.
@lenas56137 жыл бұрын
You are so right. I lost everything in a house fire. It's all just stuff.
@codypolar65936 жыл бұрын
So true. I didn't lose stuff in the fire, but had to evacuate with just what I could fit in the back of my pickup. I've never felt more freedom in my life! So, now I'm selling anything I don't use on a monthly basis. Later this year, I hope to sell everything I don't use o a weekly basis!
@TrumpetReady5 жыл бұрын
So did I and the only thing I miss are my Bible and my children's pictures.
@gracieg58495 жыл бұрын
Sheri Frederiksen 🥰💕
@amymarchandcollins63385 жыл бұрын
When I was in my early twenties my childhood home burned. My parents and siblings and most of the pets got out. It gave me a different relationship to stuff earlier than my peers.
@pandalady59645 жыл бұрын
I just cleaned my bedroom and tossed all the stuff I haven't worn in years. That was half of my clothes. It's just mind blowing to realize all the junk we tend to hoard.
@ArtbyLoreenLeedy8 жыл бұрын
Well said, e! It's always useful to rethink one's priorities and assumptions. Another bonus...I always find that clearing up my studio leads to a burst of creativity.
@ElizabethODulemba8 жыл бұрын
+Loreen Leedy Awesome Loreen! :)
@DamonDean7AcreSky8 жыл бұрын
Elizabeth, I can't believe how timely this talk was for me, to receive the link in your newsletter today after a visit with a new writing friend. She's a teacher who had lived and attended the University there. The experiences she shared with me put Edinburgh on my travel list. Thanks so much for this treasured wisdom.
@ElizabethODulemba8 жыл бұрын
+Damon Dean I'm so glad you enjoyed it, Damon!
@alvaroromero24195 жыл бұрын
This has been one of the best speech I ever seen! Thank you Elizabeth Dulemba.
@TheWelshlovely11 күн бұрын
Clearing out saved videos from saved items and stumbled across this one I saved forever ago to watch at a later date. Several years later, it's that later date, with many changes happening in my life since I saved it. The time is right and it fits the bill perfectly for where I am right now. How fortuitous. Thank you Elizabeth and I too live in Edinburgh. Wonder if you're still here|? xxx
@barbararivera23805 жыл бұрын
The solution: Pretend you're moving to Japan: A couple I knew here in the States got transferred to Tokyo. They were told to only bring with them what they needed to the new apartment and the rest of it was going to be packed in a shipping container which would be delivered 6 months later. So they move to Tokyo to their little apartment with just the necessities which they bough with them. They were perfectly happy. Then six months later comes the container from Connecticut and they thought, "What are we going to do with all this stuff???!!!"
@hmmmm7985 жыл бұрын
Barbara Rivera 😂😂
@giseleguignard68934 жыл бұрын
Tout ce dont on peut se passer durant 22 mois... on n en a plus besoin. !! Juste prise de conscience.
@DezMarivette3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing!! I’m a stuff person and an experience person and after these 18 months of Covid I realize I’ve been using my stuff to supplement my experiences!
@terrycote88795 жыл бұрын
People should come with expiration dates on them. If we knew our "end dates", I suspect many of us would live our lives very differently.
@tsambikasabineiakovidis77554 жыл бұрын
waw how true... Me for first!
@vansomz61374 жыл бұрын
Good one!
@simplyredislandgirl4 жыл бұрын
Well said!👏 Agreed!👍
@KM-nq7ez4 жыл бұрын
That’s Brillant
@XevLexa4 жыл бұрын
A good one!
@placida345 жыл бұрын
I am seeing and hearing you for the first time, and was very impressed. What a wonder pursuit of dreams of a better, more realistic life. God bless you.
@raevenphillips4178 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for sharing this, Elizabeth. It has been truly encouraging and just what I needed to hear. I keep watching it over and over for motivation. I'm truly grateful for your sharing your story. And the other commenter was right, a kids book about this subject would be brilliant and you are the perfect person to do it! Thanks again! I hope that you're continuing to stay healthy. :) Take care.
@noteasy2please8767 жыл бұрын
Three years ago I made a conscious decision to stop buying stuff and to get rid of as much as possible. Ebay to the re$cue. My house and my life are about as streamlined as they can get. And it feels great!
@codypolar65936 жыл бұрын
I'm 5 years into it and don't miss anything I've sold. Living debt free is the main thing, for those people here who are stuck on what to do after you sell. Do what fits your life and financial situation.
@MissJade7775 жыл бұрын
Great talk! Not having much stuff myself and always renting small places/rooms has enabled me to travel the world easily. Would recommend anyone to downsize and see how you can live with very little things. Havent felt like I'm missing out ever! Being mobile is the greatest gift to me.
@amidalacaverley4575 жыл бұрын
this literally made me cry. thank you, so inspiring
@maryallen10173 жыл бұрын
She was speaking her truth and every single person was listening and holding on to every word she was saying, wishing they could be living the life of so many possibilities without all their Stuff.
@spaces52954 жыл бұрын
I agree with this, though I’d also add that being a nomad can still be expensive. We need a basic level of stuff. The amount that we value that stuff can actually shift even if we don’t have much. It’s also about maintaining meaning and connection. Also, having a place to call home (as long as it’s low cost or mortgage free) insulates us. Say when there is a pandemic.
@LastKnightKaname2 жыл бұрын
This year (2022) for Christmas, I didn't get my family material items, instead I offered to pay for an experience that me and that other person would enjoy. The note came with a hand-drawn card from me and what I would like to do with that person. I think that spending time with my family means more than any gift I could give them.
@CroisMoi3 ай бұрын
That is a beautiful idea!!
@christiansgrandma68126 жыл бұрын
I'm thinking of all the bills I could have paid off if only I hadn't made all those purchases. 😢
@RosyOutlook25 жыл бұрын
Who do you think brainwashed you into buying all that stuff? TV radio, magazines, newspapers, circulars it's was the opposite of this propaganda that's who. Now they want you to give all your stuff away to charity who are all outcrops of large foundations. That is part of the agenda of the UN and the new world order, we little people are to own NOTHING.
@laineygann77135 жыл бұрын
You are not alone! We all regret things done in the past, It's a major cause of depression. We can't change it so the best thing to do is forgive yourself and move on. 😀
@spikeycat814 жыл бұрын
Never to late to realise. Just continue on from that realisation.
@HeatherValentineMsFoodie2 жыл бұрын
I’m sitting here with a broken ankle, 5 unfinished books, wanting to be traveling and cooking in Italy!! I currently have 3 storage units of stuff and a cluttered home. WOW DID THIS hit me in the gut❤
@piercrab75957 жыл бұрын
Last year we downsize from 3740 sf home to 1150 ft, throw away 1/2 of our stuff we haven't use in years. We still have a lot to let go. I keep a list of items thow away / donate and any non-food items coming in the home every month. This keep me inspire
@miaschu81752 жыл бұрын
So many people are commenting on the quiet audience. 1) No audience is that quiet, therefore it's likely that a filter has been used so we only hear the speaker. This audience is polite and listening attentively (they aren't walking out), so it's incredibly unlikely that they wouldn't clap. 2) An audience in the UK is usually less effusive than one in America anyway. 3) Many people smile, rather than laugh, at witticisms. So, even if there's no noise filter, a quiet audience doesn't mean an unappreciative audience. Some people don't think before they comment.
@ElsjeMassyn5 жыл бұрын
I am so inspired by this speech. All I can say is thank you!!
@m0L3ify4 жыл бұрын
I learned the value of only surrounding myself with the things that bring me joy -- and about how few of the items I owned actually did that -- by following the Konmari method. Now for the first time, my life is streamlined and organized, closets are spacious and functional, and I'm learning to love life with less for the first time ever. It's amazing how many things I held on to because I felt obligated to be their keeper even though they no longer served a purpose in my life or didn't even belong to me in the first place and were just things family members dumped on me. Letting go and simplifying is awesome! Highly recommended!
@lizettegonsalves65695 жыл бұрын
Hi Mrs.Elizabeth Dulemba... I really enjoyed listening to your talk and hearing about your experiences. Although I had already started getting rid of things which instead of lifting me up were actually burdening me, I definitely was motivated by your talk to continue on that not so easy journey so thank you very much! But listening to you I felt that you seem to be a person that loves life and believes that life is indeed a gift to be enjoyed and you are absolutely right about that. But you also believe that life has an end and that this life, as in a few years that we live, is all there is to live and make the best of all our dreams, am I right? Perhaps no one has shared with you yet, something that I am so grateful someone shared with me some 20 years back while I was living in Germany, (now I'm living in Ireland) that even though we all have one life we also have a choice on how long we would like to live. Yes, that's right, if we really value our lives and we want to, we can live FOREVER right here on this beautiful planet Earth, which is also a gift given to us by the same One who gifted us with life. Let me share with you two reliable statements made by that Giver of Life which can be found in... ISAIAH 45:12a & 18 - 12 I MADE THE EARTH and CREATED MAN ON IT... 18 For this is what Jehovah says, The Creator of the heavens, the true God, The One who formed the earth, its Maker who firmly established it, Who DID NOT CREATE IT SIMPLY FOR NOTHING, BUT FORMED IT TO BE INHABITED: “I am Jehovah, and there is no one else. PSALMS 37:11 & 29 - 11 But the meek will possess the earth, And they will find exquisite delight in the abundance of peace. 29 The righteous will possess the EARTH, And they will live FOREVER on it. Besides these verses there are many others that show us that we humans were made to LIVE FOREVER ON EARTH IN PERFECT CONDITIONS and that's what infact millions around this globe pray for in the famous LORD'S PRAYER also known as THE OUR FATHER PRAYER taught by Jesus.... Matthew 6:9&10 - “You must pray, then, this way:“‘Our Father in the heavens, let your name be sanctified. 10 Let your Kingdom come. Let your will take place, AS IN HEAVEN, ALSO ON EARTH. I was trying to send you a private message by messenger but somehow I didn't manage to do it. But if you would like to know more about this timely opportunity we all have to enjoy living forever please feel free to contact me on my email address at... . Wishing you all the best in motivating others to a more fulfilling life. In addition to that, we all also have the prospect of living the best never-ending life we can have and knowing this now, opens a door to many more wonderful and amazing opportunities to live a better life. Liz
@freescot80352 жыл бұрын
Thankyou, second time watching and this is an inspirational and helpful talk, but you didn't mention an attatchment to 'stuff' that has sentimental and historical value or that is beautiful or makes your heart sing =) Being a 'stuff' person does not necessarily stop you also having great experiences. Reminds me a bit of folk who promote the ideology that being a lark and leaping out of bed full of the joys of spring is somehow superior to being an owl - and I can assure you that some of my greatest experiences have been in the wee small hours - seeing the Northern Lights while an RAF and a Russian jet danced around each other over a Sutherland beach! Both have their merits =) Certainly the cost ofstorage burns but sometimes we need time to let some 'stuff' sit till we can let it go. It is ok to be a 'stuff person' too. Each to their own. But your story Elizabeth, was a pleasure to listen to. Thankyou for sharing your journey with us. Glad you are enjoying Edinburgh.
@leticiapenaloza2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! I have downsized a few times in my life, and I'm kind of....ready to let go of a bit more... and of course was having difficulty at not getting the little furry friend, then letting go of the extra dozen towels, and ... etc.! Many of the dreams on my checklist had been fulfilled. So after watching your presentation, I was able to let go some more, and get back on track with my list of dreams. My book has been published, now The Grand Canyon. LP Nakonechny
@aeptacon5 жыл бұрын
YES. it has been stopping me. It's the reason I've been down in the dumps on and off for the past 4+ years. :,(
@kayseafox5 жыл бұрын
Same
@nopseudosleft565 жыл бұрын
Then do it, get rid of it, use the money to do something great with someone you love!!! You don't need it😊😊😊👍👍👍
@RobynMcFadden5 жыл бұрын
I look around at all my stuff, think about the monthly storage bill for even more of my stuff, and I am inspired by your journey. I hope I have the same courage, that you show, within me. Thank you ♡
@cocosapps8 жыл бұрын
Great Video! I'm only 17 years old, but I can really understand you. I accomplished on thing on your list. I'm bilingual. I speak German and English. It's great if your'e not a native English speaker. You will definitely learn it at school.
@Hurrycanekatrina8 жыл бұрын
One of my new favorite videos about owning less!
@v.dargain16785 жыл бұрын
Owning less and not feeling deprived about it . Good talk .
@PoppiJuly117 жыл бұрын
Thank you Elisabeth ! You so beautifully put into words exactly what - for so long - I've been feeling about my life, my stuff and my "list" 🌳🌳
@carolechapla65058 жыл бұрын
Really enjoyed this. This is the way for me. I've felt this way for a long time.
@patriciabeckman85735 жыл бұрын
This touched a nerve. I'm an experience person but inherited my mom's Stuff. Her treasures which I have yet to release. It truly means nothing to me.
@olgabelyavsky13225 жыл бұрын
Although i do like experience, i also like stuff. But I'm not drowning in it. It's just, I have a few things, that I truly treasure, like some necklaces, some adorable mini figures, a couple bookmarks and sweet smelling chap stick. All of this fit in a small box. I believe that materialism is holding on to things that don't really serve a purpose or make you happy. It isn't usually much but stuff varies from person to person.
@dianefolan78115 жыл бұрын
Excellent talk, Elizabeth Dulemba! Good luck with your Masters in Fine Art and that last goal on your list!
@carollandis18995 жыл бұрын
Planned obsolescence is the marketing gimmick used to get us to buy new stuff. I'm moving apartments in NYC in two weeks and have no idea yet where I'm going. Yes, that's how it works in NYC (unless you have the $ to pay rent in two places at once). I'm decluttering and using this talk to motivate me. I want to be an experience person instead of a stuff person. Thank you!
@xiqueira8 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this talk. Given my own health problems, I can't backpack the world a few weeks at a time or even a year. And given our age, we can't retire ;) So, my dream has been to live in different cities around the world 2 years at a time. An opportunity came up before we were ready, and it was hard because have a full house, in mid remodel mode, and a brand new mortgage! Well, we took the opportunity to move, or my husband did, but now we have get rid of all the stuff and wrap up the remodel, and move along to our next city. My love for owning a house has recently turned into wanting to be mobil. Your talk was so very right on and helpful. I keep dragging around a gorgeous very expensive contemporary dinnete set-wrought iron, tile, solid wood, made in North Carolina, where all the furniture companies went belly up-can you see it?? I love it!!- and I have it in storage house after house since two houses again. Combining your talk with "drawing my ideal life picture" exercise from another talk and yours, I am ready to take this on. Thank you!
@paulrumohr8 жыл бұрын
I loved Elizabeth's talk. Fabulous.
@lisakrushinski94367 жыл бұрын
Excellent! You've given me a lot to think about, and do! Thank you! God bless your time in lovely Scotland!
@noemicortes21534 жыл бұрын
Very inspiring message, I’m an architectural and design “stuck” ilustrador, working on my dream/list. I’m already bilingual and accomplished few things during my 68 years. I want to learn Italian sooo, so bad, that I’m thinking to move to Italy for few months. COVID slowed down my motivation. However listening to your message I’m getting new and fresh ideas. This grandma has many items in her list. Better start sooner than later. Thanks
@emilythesongbird23068 жыл бұрын
Fabulous talk Elizabeth! So inspiring. I did something similar in my 20's. Now I'm in my 40's and wondering if maybe a new adventure is calling me. Need to start writing my checklist and reflecting on if the way I live reflects my goals and dreams now. Thank you.
@iampari205 жыл бұрын
Amazing!! A lesson for each person on earth. This quote is so true "We are sum total of our experiences". Thanks for this.
@Studio2bn6 жыл бұрын
When they didn't laugh at the Steven Wright joke I realized the entire crowd is in a damn coma !!!
@kimberlymorris51156 жыл бұрын
Max Maxwell we ainer
@catb86615 жыл бұрын
I don't know who Steven Wright is either.
@jumpingjack76745 жыл бұрын
@@catb8661 Welcome back from your coma
@marilyns84974 жыл бұрын
No, that's not fair. I didn't laugh either because I was absorbing what she'd said. And I totally agreed with the 'joke' which wasn't really a joke.
@firesign42974 жыл бұрын
😂
@sharit79705 жыл бұрын
9:55- the thing is 'planned obsolescence' Great talk!
@marthas.44565 жыл бұрын
I used to collect lots of things. Minerals, old pottery etc. I had around 200 antique vases, now I'm slowly selling them. They don't sell for much, but I'm still able to get back the money what I spent on them. Why I decided to get rid of them? I realised we just had no space in our two bedroom flat, so much space was taken up by stuff which was never used by me or my husband. They just started to weight me down. I still love antique pottery, but now I want to own only few pieces, not couple of hundred.
@fritziskunterbunteschaos91735 жыл бұрын
Jesus... Just.... Jesus! That experience person being stuck in a stuff life... Holy.... Thank you! Thank you so much for all these thoughts that hit me at a depth I can't even process after the first time watching. I will revisit just to make process on all the topics addresses that pertain to me.