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by Darla Isackson
With Christmas behind
us, we may be faced with a new dilemma: how to make room for new
“things” when our closets and cupboards are already
jam-packed. Some home management texts include the rule: “Whenever
you buy something new, get rid of something unwanted.” They
suggest that the number of items that flow into our homes should
equal the number of items that flow out. Seems like good advice,
so why is it so hard to follow? We know that if we do not get rid
of things, we may find ourselves unwisely seeking a larger home,
renting storage space, or living in constant chaos!
More importantly, there
is spiritual danger in placing too much emphasis on material things.
They can literally take over our lives, become a false god. 2 Nephi
9:30 reads, “But wo unto the rich, who are rich as to things
of the world . . . and their hearts are upon their treasures; wherefore,
their treasure is their God. And behold, their treasure shall perish
with them also.”
Most of us have hundreds
of items in our houses that we do not want, do not need, do not
use, do not appreciate. My personal application of the law of consecration
is that I need to give away everything of any value that someone
else might find useful. Since it is painful to live in a cluttered
house with tons of stuff, and we would really rather have others
make use of the things we aren’t using, why does it take so
much courage to let go? Why do we keep so many things in our homes
that are doing us virtually no good?
Here are some commons
reasons for hanging on:
1. “If
I get rid of things, I’m really throwing money away.”
The truth is that we lose money when we keep unused possessions.
They occupy expensive space and rob us of valuable time. A home
management guru wisely said, “Have nothing in your house that
you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.”
2. “Every
time I consider giving something away, I think I may need it sometime.
I don’t want to have to replace things I could have saved.”
For every hundred things we think we might use, we really
use about one. It’s cheaper in the long run to buy the one
again when we need it than to try to keep track of all that stuff.
And if you are anything like me--even when you know you have it,
you aren’t likely to be able to find it when you need it and
have to go out and buy a new one anyway!
3. “I’m
sentimental. If I throw away things attached to memories I feel
like I’m throwing away my past. I’m especially attached
to gifts.” Things are only symbols. Keep the memories,
let go of the worn-out symbols. Gifts are symbols of love. Keep
the love and let go of the gift that no longer serves you. If the
giver truly loves you, he or she would not want to burden you with
things that are not useful.
4. “It’s
too good to throw away--I’ll keep it until I find just the
right person to give it to.” It makes more sense to put
it in a Deseret Industries box and let them find the person who
truly needs it. If you don’t have a Deseret Industries near
you, many other charitable organizations welcome donations.
5. “I
identify with my things.” The environment we create is
often a mirror image of our life--cluttered mind, cluttered house,
etc. However, we should carefully avoid the false implication that
possessions define us. Who we really are in the Lord’s sight
has nothing to do with cars and houses and other possessions. The
Lord “looketh on the heart.” It seems to me that President
Benson’s quote that if we put God first that other things
would assume their proper place or drop out of our lives entirely
can be well applied to possessions.
6. “It
was a mistake to buy it and I hate to waste money.” If
we wasted our money buying something we don’t like and don’t
use and can’t return, keeping it around for a long time won’t
make it any less of a mistake. Remember, it’s okay to make
mistakes.
7. “I
don’t have time to sort or the mental energy to make decisions
about what to keep and what to give away.” We can begin
by getting rid of one item at a time. We don’t have to do
it all at once. When we do have a few hours to devote to a de-junking
raid, home management experts suggest labeling three boxes “give
away, store, and throw away” to simplify the sorting task.
Solid Reasons for Simplifying Our Lives
Saint Francis said, “Riches prick us with a thousand troubles
in getting them, as many cares in preserving them, and yet more
anxiety in spending them, and with grief in losing them.”
The less you
have, the less you will have to take care of and worry over. Material
goods gobble time and energy in many ways, such as:
1. They create clutter, weighing us down emotionally. Gladys Allen
wore a huge rubber albatross around her neck in her de-junking seminars
to symbolize the effect of unnecessary possessions. “Things”
clutter our minds as well as our drawers, closets, counters, garages,
and basements. We have to keep a mental inventory of them.
2. Possessions cost more than the original price when we spend money
storing, repairing, protecting, and cleaning them.
3. Possessions demand cleaning. How many things can we actually
enjoy washing, dusting, polishing, soaking, scouring and scraping?
4. Possessions create errands. Not only do we spend time driving
miles to the store, looking for parking, and waiting in store lines
when we buy goods, but double and quadruple that time investment
when we have to take our things to be exchanged, repaired, or cleaned.
Time is the only truly precious and irreplaceable commodity in our
lives; it is not wise to spend too much of our valuable time on
possessions when we could be investing it in eternally on important
things such as loving, serving, and learning.
5. Possessions are susceptible to the law of entropy: they spot,
rust, crumble, dent, fray, and come unglued. Consequently they create
worry and stress. Worrying about breakage, loss, theft, fire, repairs,
and insurance premiums weighs us down. Every item let go of is one
less worry and less grief to look forward to when it gets lost or
broken. Matthew 6:19-21 says: “Lay not up for yourselves treasures
upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt, and where thieves
break through and steal; But lay up for yourselves treasures in
heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth corrupt, and where thieves
do not break through nor steal: For where your treasure is, there
will your heart be also.”
6. Possessions need organizing. How many women can go through her
house without hearing her disorganized possessions cry out to her
to be sorted, filed, or discarded. With each sorting sessions we
are faced with tiring decisions. The fewer possessions we have,
the fewer tiring decisions we have to make in regard to what to
do with them.
7 . Possessions give us more to apologize for, climb over and argue
over. Possessions encourage greed. The more we focus on material
things, the more we tend to brag, hoard, compete, and want more.
The more we get the less we seem to be satisfied with what we’ve
got.
Bertrand Russell said,
“It is the preoccupation with possession more than anything
else, that prevents man from living freely and nobly.”
Trying to keep up with
Joneses can put stress on relationships and financial stability.
Materialism can cause divorce, bankruptcy, dissatisfaction and deteriorating
mental and physical health. People can become intoxicated with,
infatuated by, and addicted to possessions. They have the power
to own more of you than you own of them.
Seeing Is Believing
Thirty years ago when I lived in Alcala de Henares, Spain, few locals
had cars, appliances, or electronic gadgets. There were only five
single unit dwellings in the entire town; everyone else lived in
tiny apartments with no yards, no grass. I found myself restructuring
many of my beliefs about “things.” I had been raised
in a society that constantly attempts to convince people that things
bring happiness. Advertising slogans such as “Happiness is
an Electric Dryer” are a dime a dozen. Yet I constantly saw
people who had almost nothing who appeared relaxed, unstressed,
happy. When I had the opportunity to travel from my home in Spain
to live in Algeria for a few weeks I was able to take only what
would fit in two steamer trunks--and that included all household
goods and supplies for two preschoolers! I was never so free, never
so able to focus on loving and learning. We were privileged to visit
a communal home there. We saw bare rooms, scant possessions, perfect
order, immaculate cleanliness, and happy people. What a contrast
from our harried lifestyles where we are inclined to spend so much
time and waste so much energy on obtaining and maintaining possessions.
The Real Treasures of Life
D&C 19:38 reads, “Pray always, and I will pour out my
Spirit upon you, and great shall be your blessing--yea even more
than if you should obtain the treasures of the earth and corruptibleness
to the extent thereof.” Who can doubt that the spiritual blessings
of life are the real treasures. We are counseled to treasure up
the words of Christ, treasure up knowledge, and treasure up the
blessings of salvation, rather than possessions:
*JS-M 1:37 “whoso
treasureth up my word, shall not be deceived.”
* D&C 89:19 “And
all saints who remember to keep and do these sayings, . . . shall
find wisdom and great treasures of knowledge, even hidden treasures.”
* D&C 6:3 “
. . . that he may treasure up for his soul everlasting salvation
in the kingdom of God.”
May 2003 be a year rich
in spiritual treasures.
Note: Order
Darla’s talk tapes: “The Juggling Act” and “Peace
of Mind” or her booklet To Be a Mother: The Agonies and
the Ectasies.by calling Rosehaven’s toll-free at: 1-888-790-7040
or going to their web page: www.rosehavenpublishing.com.
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