Saturday, August 1, 2020
Asking Friends and Family to Embrace Change
Asking Friends and Family to Embrace Change Change isnât easy. More often than not, we donât change because we get in our own way. Other times we donât make a change because weâre afraid of what people will think about us, afraid of what they will say about us, afraid they will treat us differently. Ultimately, we are afraid of rejection. When we approached minimalism, we realized many of our closest friends and family members were supportive of the changes we wanted to make; and in other cases, many of them were neutral bystanders, ambivalent to the simplification going on around us. In some instances, some of the people closest to us didnât approve of our new paths: some of these people mistook the journey on which we were embarking as a direct attack on their way of life, as if by questioning our lives we were also questioning their lives. Clearly this was not our intent: our journey involved questioning our lives, not theirs. We were simply looking for happiness, using minimalism as a tool to search for deeper meaning. Yet some people thought the changes we were making were silly, stupid, and even crazy (literally). We had worked hard for more than a decade to accumulate all these nice material possessions, big houses, fancy cars, âimportantâ job titles, and the American Dream, all of which was supposed to make us happy, right? When the consumerist, over-indulgent lives we were leading didnât make us happy, there had to be something wrong with us. At least thatâs what the naysayers said: Maybe Joshua Ryan went crazy. Maybe they are experiencing a mid-midlife crisis. Maybe they joined a cult (someone actually accused us of joining a cult, likening minimalism to Jonestown and Branch Davidian). We had to explain a few things to these naysayers Itâs not you, itâs me. Weâve all heard this line before. It has been parodied a thousand times, but there is a profound truth to be discovered here. We werenât questioning anyone elseâs lifestyle but our own. Many people werenât happy with their own situations, and they aspired to be like us because they thought we âhad it figured out.â We didnât have it figured out, though, and that frustrated some people because we were who they wanted to emulate: we had the material possessions, the salaries, the awards, the facade of power, the fast-track to corporate success. We looked around us, though, and realized most of the people above us, people several rungs higher on the corporate ladder, werenât happy, eitherâ"they were far less happy than we were. What were we supposed to doâ"keep working exceptionally hard and aspire to continue to be unhappy? Itâs all right to tell naysayers youâre making changes in your life so you can be happy. Better yet, you can do wh at we did and ask those naysayers a question: âYou want me to be happy, donât you?â Circumstances change. If our 28-year-old selves could have time-traveled back to 1999 to tell our eighteen-year-old selves about everything we were going to âaccomplishâ over the next decade, the teenage Joshua Ryan would have been elated. You mean Iâm going to have this, that, and this? You mean Iâll be able to afford this? The happiness would have soon faded, though, and by 28 (or perhaps much sooner) an overwhelming cloak of discontent would have enveloped our lives. Thatâs because circumstances change, and thus, we must change: we must continue to evolve and grow if we expect to be happy. What adds value to your life today, may not add value to your life tomorrow. You, too, can change. Minimalism may not be the answer for you. If youâre not happy, though, you, too, can build your change muscle and, over time, change your circumstances. There are many paths to happiness; minimalism simply allowed us to clear the clutter from our paths so we could find that happiness sooner. Show people the benefits. As we journeyed further down our paths, many of the naysayers jumped on board. Not because we asked them toâ"weâve never asked anyone to embrace minimalismâ"but because they saw the happiness weâd welcomed into our lives. They saw that for the first time in our adult lives we were truly excited, joyous, and content with who we were. They saw that perhaps we didnât have it figured out before, and maybe we didnât have it figured out now, but we certainly appeared to be on the right track. The actions alone didnât convince them, but once they saw the benefits, they better understood the changes weâd undergone. There were, however, some relationships we had to get rid of: it wasnât easy, but certain peopleâ"friends and familyâ"werenât adding value to our lives, they were sources of negativity, and they prevented us from growing. We treated this option as a last resort, but itâs important to know that, as we grow, even our relationships can change. Today, many of our old friends are still our friendsâ"while others are notâ"but weâve also established new, empowering relationships that encourage our constant growth and help us enjoy what we contribute to the relationship. Read this essay and 150 others in our new book, Essential.
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