New haircut, who dis?

★

PR's Tumblrdome
wallacepolsom

JVL
sheepfilms
macklin celebrini has autism
Fai_Ryy

ellievsbear
trying on a metaphor
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Peter Solarz
Mike Driver
KIROKAZE

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
official daine visual archive
noise dept.
untitled
Xuebing Du
Sade Olutola
hello vonnie
seen from Brazil
seen from Azerbaijan
seen from Italy
seen from Uzbekistan

seen from Philippines
seen from United States

seen from Tunisia

seen from France

seen from Brazil
seen from Bangladesh
seen from Guernsey

seen from Singapore
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Netherlands
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Spain
seen from Indonesia
@joshuafieldsmillburn
New haircut, who dis?
Spoke to an MBA class this week about the three most dangerous words in the English language. (at University of Montana)
Back in the day. #TBT
It's #GivingTuesday. @TheMinimalists are building an orphanage. You can help at minimalists.com/hope
Whoa! The final month of the year is already here. Hello, December. Let's end 2015 with one last round of letting go. We call it the 30-Day Minimalism Game. Here’s how it works: Find a friend or family member—someone who’s willing to get rid of their excess stuff. This month, each of you must get rid of one thing on the first day. On the second, two things. Three items on the third. So forth, and so on. Anything can go! Clothes, furniture, electronics, tools, decorations, etc. Donate, sell, or recycle. Whatever you do, each material possession must be out of your house—and out of your life—by midnight each day. It’s an easy game at first. However, it starts getting challenging by week two when you’re both jettisoning more than a dozen items each day. Whoever can keep it going the longest wins; you both win if you can make it all month. Bonus points if you play with more than two people. Win or lose, we’d love to hear about your game—share your photos using our #MinsGame hashtag. Ready? Set. Let go!
Sunday mornings.
Thankful for this guy, too.
Thankful for this guy.
Hey, United Kingdom! We're sneaking into your radios tonight at 7:15 to chat about minimalism and hoarding with The Mark Forrest Evening Show on the BBC.
Follow Friday. (at Missoula, Montana)
Everything that remains essential.
1983, Dayton, Ohio. #tbt
Mo' money, mo' problems. No money, know problems. When our happiness is measured in dollars, that's a problem. Net worth is not a barometer for self-worth.
Big thanks to @PeopleMag for featuring The Minimalists in their "Living Your Best Life" issue last month.
#MinimalsmTips Day 31: Once you've simplified, keep simplifying. This may be our last day of the month, which means it's the last day of our daily #MinimalsmTips, but that doesn't mean we've reached our endpoint. Minimalism itself is not a destination; it is a path toward a more meaningful life. Once we've simplified, we must continue questioning everything, from our material possessions and our careers, to our relationships and our daily activities. A new month is right around the corner, and so if you'd like to keep your momentum, this is the perfect time to play our 30-Day Minimalism Game. Here's how it works: find a friend or coworker, and agree to donate or sell some of your excess possessions over the next month. On day one, get rid of one item each. Day two, two items. Day three, three items. So forth and so on. Whoever goes the longest wins. If you both make it to the end of the month, you both win, because you have jettisoned nearly 500 items that no longer clutter your life. Share your progress with thousands of other people using the #MinsGame hashtag. A simple life is a well-curated life. Keep letting go.
#MinimalsmTips Day 30: Declutter your social media feeds: unfollow any account that doesn't add value to your life. We started The Minimalists five years ago with the hope that we could contribute to the greater good. Because of the power of sharing, our website has grown to more than 4 million readers—and hundreds of thousands of people subscribe via email and follow our inspirational messages on Twitter and Facebook and this newfangled thing called Instagram. We’re grateful for every person who reads our content, finds worth in our words, and shares our message. We appreciate you; we want you here. We don’t, however, want anyone to feel obligated to stick around if they don’t continue to find value in our work. We understand that our message will not resonate with everyone. So if you stop finding value in our message, please feel free to unsubscribe or unfollow. You won’t hurt our feelings. Scout's honor. We’d rather you spend your time and attention on something that adds value to your life. We want you to be happy, and so the last thing we want to do is add to the clutter. This rule shouldn’t apply only to The Minimalists, though: we must be willing to unfollow anyone; and when someone unfollows us, we must be willing to let go. No one needs to be offended when someone unfriends them on Facebook or stops following them on Instagram. But unfortunately, many people feel hurt, disrespected, or disregarded when someone leaves their online social circle. Instead of feeling offended—instead of questioning the other person’s intentions—we need to realize that we can’t add value to everyone all the time, and that even though someone found value in us previously, that doesn’t mean they will necessarily find value now or in the future. People often grow in different directions; that’s the beauty of life. It's okay to move on. That said, if you do find merit in our words, please continue to share our essays via email and social media. Help us spread the word. We appreciate the love. Thank you for being part of a movement that is bigger than any one (or two) person(s).