Learn Simplicity from the Old Folks!

Imagine retro seventies modernist furniture. Very big, very square. Upholstery? Faux fur. Equally big and square is the coffee table that sits in front of the sofa, with rounded corners made of faux wood. A creamy white monstrous family Bible sits in the middle. Bulbous green glass lamps illuminate the room, revealing the bright green shag carpet on the floor… and the wall.

This, my friends, is not just a story, it’s a description of my landlord’s apartment. She’s in her eighties , and she’s been living here and renting out these one bedroom apartments for many years. She has no interest in remodeling anything. She’s satisfied with the way things are. She’s content. (And while I was writing this post, she brought me some chocolate pecan clusters… now I’m content! ;-)

Joshua Becker at becomingminimalist wrote a great post on contentment last week, and it got me thinking: who do I know that’s content with life, and what can I learn from them? And that’s when it hit me: old people! (NOTE: That was a figure of speech, I was not actually assaulted by any elderly person!)

Couple in Hammock

We live in a western culture that absolutely devalues older people, and it makes me sick. We don’t want to listen to their incredible wisdom because “things have changed.” Granted, technology has certainly changed some things, it’s also true that some things never change. There is nothing new underneath the sun.

For instance, Brian Clark from Copyblogger tweeted this brilliant statement a few weeks ago: “If you want to learn social media, learn to be social. The medium is irrelevant.” Soooo true. And guess what? Older folks can teach you a lot about how to genuinely be sociable - especially my generation, which, as a whole, is inept at real life social interaction.

Now back to this idea of contentment: I’ll bet you know, or have known, some older people in your life that are perfectly content with what they have right now. If they didn’t purchase another new thing the rest of their lives, it would not affect their happiness one bit.

I love people like that. That’s the place I want to be, where my joy and passion doesn’t emanate from what I own or don’t own, but from my relationships and the difference I’m making in people’s lives. Who better to show me how to get there than someone who has already made the journey?

If you follow simplifi.de on Twitter (and please do!), then you know that I have been tweeting quotes from a guy named Charles Wagner a lot lately. That’s because I have been reading his book called, “The Simple Life”, and it is the single best book I have read on simplicity. Every page has something to apply to my life today. (A review is forthcoming on simplifi.de)

Oh yeah, Charles Wagner was born in 1852, and The Simple Life was published in 1904.

Every generation struggles with finding simplicity in the midst of chaos. And I’ll bet if you look hard enough, you can find someone around you from the previous generation who has succeeded. Go visit them as soon as you can. Sit with them on their couch, that couch that has probably been in and out of style 3 times already. Sit down, shut up, and just listen. Ask them questions. Be humble. Learn how they found peace in the midst of turmoil, simplicity in the middle of an increasingly complicated world.


We would love it if you would share your thoughts about this post… tell us about the person that came to mind when you were reading this post, and how they live(d) a simple life!