More From Less
Let me get right to the point: The only way to get more out of life is to choose less.
Less stuff.
Less activity.
Less wanting more.
Less of you.
I apologize if this seems a little abrupt. Believe me, I searched for a different way to kick this off.
I wanted to ease into the heavy stuff, to make it more palatable, less
offensive. More than once I hit the delete button on a touching story because touching and heart warming
didn’t quite fit. I also thought it might be easier if someone else hit you with the bad news.
Maybe Saint Augustine wouldn’t insult you when he tells you all your
priorities are wrong, that you’ve wasted your life in your pursuit of
comfort and material goods. Perhaps you wouldn’t become angry if C.S. Lewis told you the frustration that fills
your life will never go away until you slow down and begin saying no to
yourself and your children. And if Mr. Rogers, yes, that Mr. Rogers, confronted you with your need to crawl out
of the center of your universe and assume a lifestyle of humility, who could
argue?
So I searched my library for just the right
quote from one of my favorite authors. One or two came close, but I thought it better
just to come right out and say what you and I need to hear: The key to making life matter is to choose to live with less.
Give stuff away.
Simplify your lifestyle.
Deflate your opinion of yourself.
Choose less because less is more.
There I go again, writing with a two-by-four. I keep trying to stop.
A wise man once said the bruises of a friend are better than the kisses of an
enemy, and that’s what I’m trying to do. Bruise my friends, beginning with myself. I don’t enjoy the process,
but there is no other way. The bruises on my forehead are starting to add up, but I can’t help
myself. I’ve reached a point where the pain is better than the delusion that I can have it all and still
have my life count for something. For
too long I’ve spiritualized the hard sayings of Jesus and Moses and Solomon. I know real life is not measured by
how much I own, but I assumed I could own as much as I wanted as long as I kept everything in its proper
perspective.
I can’t.
None of us can.
We can’t because the world of work and school
and mortgages and loading kids in the minivan for ball practice and band
recitals and school open houses leaves little time for anything else. The
psalmist said to be still and know that the Lord is God, but stillness is hard
to find in the perpetual motion machine in which most of us live. Jesus said He came that you and I might have life and have it to the
full. My life is full. Yours probably is as well. Too full. Full of stuff.Full of
activities. Full of ever expanding
schedules and shrinking days. Full
of the desire for more. Somehow, I
don’t believe this is what Jesus had in mind. Through it all something is missing. And
that something is the very thing I really want out of life.
Not happiness, but real abiding joy, a joy that outlasts hard times and
refuses to be chained to good times.
I want real relationships. I know a lot of people. I
want to really know some of them, beginning with my family.
I want freedom. Not the freedom to do what I want, but the freedom to go to sleep at
night without the weight of worry raising my blood pressure.
But more than anything I want that to which I
devote my life to last longer than I do.
Unfortunately, all I really want out of life is
constantly squeezed out by noises which refuse to take “no” for an answer. The bills, they demand to be paid. They get really angry when ignored.
And food, everyone in my household has this strange addiction to food. Someone has to go buy it. Someone has to prepare it. Someone has to
clean up afterwards. If only the Little Red Hen were available. And the house, it always wants something. “Mow
my yard,” it says, “And clean my gutters and fix my roof and my sink is clogged.” The house never shuts
up (although I learned a long time ago to tune out its demand to be cleaned). And I’m just getting started.
Then there’s the rush. It never seems to end. Between the job and the kids and church, there’s never a moment to call our own.
Even if we did, it isn’t as though our minds would be free to focus on what I really want out of life. The
only thing better than the rush is stress filled rush. And stress is everywhere.
Especially at work. If by some strange
coincidence we managed to have a stress free day on the job, the world might
come to an end. Someone always has
a complaint or the boss wants to downsize manpower while increasing
production, or rumors of a merger and subsequent job cuts keep floating
around. If everybody we worked
with wasn’t so… how can I put this mildly?... common sense challenged.
And if they would just stop griping for even a day, maybe then I could
make a serious run at joy or real relationships or finding a way to do
something that will outlast me. But
they don’t and I can’t and I wonder if I ever will.
And home isn’t much better.
The average family is always on the run.
This conglomeration of people who love one another rarely finds time to
eat a meal together. And with each
passing year it only seems to get worse. Too
much to do, too little time, intimate strangers may be a better label than
family.
I look for a little solace at church, but
between committee meetings and Bible study groups and taking the youth bowling
and working on the building (which wasn’t built right to begin with, so much
for quality work from volunteers) the place sometimes gives me more headaches
than peace and joy and love. Then the pastor asks for volunteers for a new
program he wants to start and I know I should sign up, but I don’t want to
give up another Saturday. Instead
of feeling better about myself and life I walk away feeling guilty.
Now that my whine fest is over, can I be
completely honest? The demands and
stress of the day rarely keep me from pursuing deeper relationships with my
wife and daughters. My job
doesn’t rob me of time I might spend on that which is most important to me.
Mowing the lawn and painting doors and all the constant maintenance my
one hundred year old house demands never stops me from doing what I want to
do. No, the greatest barrier I
must overcome in my struggle to find the life I really want, is me. And your
greatest barrier is you.
I know what I say I want out of life.
With my lips I confess I believe joy is found in growing closer to
people I love and becoming more like the God I say I follow.
But when push comes to shove, I shove myself onto the couch, remote in
hand, and waste hours at a time, ignoring both my God and my family.
I know with my head money can’t buy happiness, but that doesn’t
stop me from drooling over the Best Buy ads.
And then there’s the schedule. No
one makes us try to do it all. Running children from one event to another and
practice upon practice until we tell the days of the week by the coach we see
is not forced upon us. The
pressure comes from within. From
inside of me. I could say no.
And so could you. But we
don’t. We can’t. Somehow the incredible pace of our schedule meets a need.
It makes us feel important, useful.
Again, the problem isn’t the coach who calls and asks if I can make
twenty-five sandwiches for the track team.
The real problem is me.
My life and my schedule and the stress that
surrounds me didn’t choose me. I
chose it. Before I can even think
of trying to squeeze more joy of life I must first look around and realize
something has to change. Only when
I reach the point of frustration meltdown, when I go to bed and wonder where
the day went and dread dragging myself out from under the covers in six hours,
only then will I be willing to make some needed changes.
And that’s what this book is all about. This
isn’t a book that will tell you how to squeeze more out of an already over
packed schedule. Nor will it tell
you how to find both material comfort and spiritual bliss. If
it were it may have been easier for me to write. You
will not find the path to the simple life where you and your family will live
in perfect peace and harmony. I
wish it did, but perfect peace and harmony cannot be found this side of
heaven. Instead this is a book
about making one of the most difficult decisions any of us will ever make, the
decision to choose less out of life in order that you might find what you
really want. The only way to enjoy
life is to choose to live with less for less is more.
What follows are not some pie in the sky
platitudes that I discovered from spending a couple of years holed up in a
monastery in the middle of the desert somewhere.
Nor do I want to imply that I’ve perfected everything you will read
over the next sixteen chapters. More
than anything I’ve ever written, this book has been a journey. I started
working on the idea over five years ago. I thought finally moving from a
concept to words on a page would be easy. After all, I felt like I’d lived
the tough choices this book challenges you to make.
I thought I had a pretty good handle on what it meant to live with
less. And then I started writing
and I discovered I had so much more to learn.
What follows is the most difficult book I’ve
ever attempted, a fact I find more than a little ironic.
A book on simplifying life complicates my own life as I try to write
it. Now, looking back over the
process of the past few months, I realize it had to be this way.
I’ve done everything I can to avoid clichés and easy answers.
Choosing less in a world that refuses to deny itself anything will
never be easy. Ever.
Nor did I want to paint the picture of some ideal life that would only
leave you frustrated and loaded down with guilt.
This world is a complicated place to live.
It has been since the day Adam and Eve disobeyed God and plunged the
world into sin. Finding our way
through this mess will not be easy. Finally,
I wanted this book to accurately reflect the message of the Bible.
Real life can only be found in a right relationship with the God who
created you. I pray that message
flows through every page.
The only way to get more out of life is to
choose less. Less stuff.
Less activity. Less wanting
more. Less of you. And
less of me, too. May God give us
the courage to choose less in order that we might experience more of the life
He has planned for us.
©2006 Mark A. Tabb
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