We tend to think of minimalism as the rejection of materialism. Oooo, stuff is bad, right? No, it’s that too much stuff is bad, the wrong stuff is bad. How can you tell whether you have too much stuff or the wrong stuff?  Well, is the acquisition, care and safekeeping of your stuff getting in the way of doing what’s important to you? Is it keeping you from being the person you want to be? Because “stuff” isn’t just material goods. It’s also all the ways we spend our time—doing stuff. 

How can you tell what’s truly important? Ask yourself, “If I had six months to live, is this what I would be doing? What if I had a year to live? Six years? Is this how I would spend my remaining time?” I think over and over you’d find that it’s not.

Find the thing that’s important to you, then do that thing. Make it a priority. Make the time and space to do it. When you do, it will break the monotony, break the power the wrong stuff has over you. And it will give your life meaning and a purpose beyond merely surviving or killing time.

Find your own life values. Don’t blindly follow someone else’s values, including mine. That doesn’t mean to automatically reject everyone else’s values. It means your values have to come from your own heart, soul and mind. Socrates said that an unexamined life isn’t worth living. I would add that unexamined values are not worth having. 

Do your values have value? By what standards should you measure the worth of your values? Do they lead to joy? Do they make you the type of person your want to be? Do they make life better and more meaningful not only for yourself but for others as well? Could you proclaim your values with pride, without shame? Then you’re probably on the right path for you.

Living in a vehicle doesn’t just minimize our possessions, it minimizes all the stuff of life we might be tangled in. It minimizes pointless distractions and maximizes our opportunities for doing the things that are actually important to us. And if you don’t really know what’s important to you, living like this is a way to find out. Who knows, maybe you’ll discover that living in a building is very important to you after all.