Minimalism:
The Japanese Art of Declutter to Organize Your Home Life
(2018)
by Kiku Katana
One of my habits while reading a book is that I also take time to listen to the
author’s interviews and/or talks on podcasts and YouTube and, if available, I
listen to the audiobook. In this way, I can absorb more information, catch what
I might miss when I’m just reading it and figure how the author thinks or the
reasoning process. Also, it helps me to know what is his or her main points (if
you can find the author’s TED Talks online that would be superb!). If I’m very
interested in the subject, I explore other authors or speakers that cover the
same topic. Because of this habit (or rather discipline?), I can somewhat
figure out either the author is original – in a sense of the way the author
expressing the thoughts or ideas not the actual subject itself, for “there
is nothing new under the sun” (Ecclesiastes 1:9) – or just straight-up
plagiarizing.
So, what do I think about Kiku Katana’s Minimalism?
Well, to put it mildly, she falls in between. Before this book, I’ve read Marie
Kondo’s The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up and Fumio Sasaki’s Goodbye,
Things, and Kiku draws heavily from these two books. It is not
word-for-word or even thought-for-thought similarities but more like
paraphrasing ideas and techniques. Although it is very familiar, repetitive,
and not-so-original for me, I find that this book is helpful: 1) as an
introduction if you haven’t read any of the minimalist books (one of the
definitions of a minimalist that I like is someone who “keeping things very
simple”); 2) to remind us that we are living in a very consumeristic
society that wants more and so we must examine ourselves and control our
impulses to be passive consumers; and 3) the approach to extend the
philosophy holistically in our lives not just our dealing with things or stuff
is seem unique to Kiku for she also talks about health, finance, and food
consumptions. Other than that, it is similar to other books (and most of the
popular authors are from Japan, the same culture). Understandably, the subject
of minimalism is not that broad and straight to the point. If you ‘get’ the
philosophy, then, the execution is a matter of context, purpose, and
experience.
I own only less than a dozen of plain
t-shirts, use a plastic cardholder as my wallet, I don’t watch TV, no wall
decoration in my place so far, almost non-active in social media except for
LEGASI.tv, only leave essential apps on my phone, no debt except one, etc., I’m
not calling myself a minimalist because a) I might change; b) I’m
a maximalist when it comes to physical books and motorcycles; c) It
should become a lifestyle not just following the trend; and d) although
the term ‘minimalism’ (and even ‘essentialism’) first use as an art term*, I
found out that the modern-day teachings of it are rooted from the Zen Buddhism
(the practice, however, are ancient). This requires discernment. One of the
mottos of minimalism is: “Less is more.” But as Christ-follower, my
motto is: “Godliness with contentment is great gain” (1 Timothy 6:6). If
it seems like I go with the minimalist mentality, it is because it will lead me
to contentment 😊💪
#1Book1Week #ServeToLead #LeadersAreReaders #GrowingLeaders #LetsMakeReadingCoolAgain #Minimalism #Essentialism #GodlyContentment #Lifestyle
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THINK BIG. START
SMALL. GO DEEP.
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