September 30, 2025

Smplf


Simplify! Simplify!

Simplify.

Simplify

Smplify

Smplfy

Smplf




Y m hv rcnzd th wrd n th ttl bfr y gt hr. Rght? 

If so, it was simple, but not too simple.

This is my thought experiment on simplification. 


Henry David Thoreau said, 

"Our life is frittered away by detail... Simplify, simplify.”  

Why didn’t he just say simplify?  

Wouldn’t that be smplr?

"Keep on going…" he seems to be stressing, because there is always more that can be done.


Albert Einstein said, 

"Everything should be made as simple as possiblebut not simpler.” 

In other words, even simplicity contains a component of complexity, and by oversimplification, we ignore the reality of that which helps us understand the world around us more completely. 

We sometimes need more details to make informed decisions, or to notice finer things. 

Think about the difference between going to the store and buying vegetables versus buying seeds, preparing the soil, planting, watering, caring for, and finally harvesting and processing the vegetables you grew. 

In this scenario, which in the simple life, and which is more complex? 

Buying vegetables from the store is the simpler alternative, but by avoiding the complexity of growing your own, you also miss out on the joys of doing so, which are many.

As we traverse the complexities of our world, striking a balance with simplicity is crucial. 

This equilibrium helps us make well-informed decisions and cultivates a deeper understanding of ourselves and the amazing cosmos we all share.

Doing the most simple thing may not be doing the absolute best thing. 

Einstein reminds us that we can take joy in the complexities, too, and therefore soak up the full spectrum of experience.

Tht sms smpl engh. 

Wht d y thnk?






September 27, 2025

Break Free from Propaganda





Mark Twain nailed it: “It’s easier to fool people than to convince them they’ve been fooled.” That denial won’t change the fact that we’ve been fooled time and time again. 

From slick ads coercing us to buy things we don’t need and didn’t even know we wanted, to government mandates, our world is awash in manipulations designed to make us conform and comply without question. 

In post-COVID times, when blind obedience to “trust the science” or “follow the rules” has been challenged, it’s clear we need to rethink how we respond to propaganda. 

Simple living isn’t just about decluttering your space—it’s about freeing your mind from lies and outside control. Here’s why we’re so vulnerable and how to fight back.

Why We’re So Easy to Fool
Our brains are wired to trust, not doubt. Psychological research, like Paul Ekman’s studies on deception, shows we’re lousy at spotting lies. That is because we assume good faith, even when power, money, or control is at play. This makes us easy targets for those who exploit our trust. We’re also cognitively lazy. Critical thinking takes effort, and in a world of endless work and consumption, we often skip the mental heavy lifting, even when it’s critical. 

Over the last five years, we’ve seen how this laziness can lead to accepting directives without questioning their logic or impact. Finally, our psychological weaknesses—fear, need for belonging, aversion to conflict—leave us open to manipulation.

Governments and corporations know this, using propaganda to shape not just what we think but what we do. 

In recent years, we’ve seen how fear-driven narratives can push entire populations to comply with rules that, in hindsight, many now question.
The Propaganda Machine: Consent and Compliance
In 1928, Edward Bernays, the “Father of Public Relations,” wrote Propaganda, a blueprint for manipulating the masses. 

He declared, 

“The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society.” 

Bernays didn’t just engineer consent—getting people to agree—he mastered compliance, ensuring they acted as desired, often without thinking. Bernays used emotional triggers, media saturation, and trusted figures like doctors or celebrities to make behaviors feel natural. 

His 1929 “Torches of Freedom” campaign convinced women to smoke by tying cigarettes to liberation. If he could sell that, he could sell anything.

Today more than ever, Bernays’ tactics feel eerily familiar. From blanket mandates to media-driven fear, we’ve seen compliance weaponized on a global scale. 

Mask rules, lockdowns, and vaccine campaigns leaned more on social pressure and “expert” authority, backed up by The $cience. Questions were discouraged, then banned. 

Yet, as skepticism grows—fueled by revelations of inconsistent policies or hidden agendas—people are waking up like never before. 

Blind compliance isn’t just dangerous; it’s the opposite of living simply and authentically.

How to Fight Back
We’ve had enough of being manipulated, but compliance thrives when we stay silent. To live rebelliously and simply, we must reject propaganda and reclaim our autonomy. Here are four ways to stop being fooled: 1. Hone Your Critical Thinking: If something seems off, it probably is. Question The $cience when it’s inconsistent or agenda-driven. Do your own research, check primary sources, cross-reference, and think independently. 2. Be a Relentless Skeptic: Question everything—politicians, media, even “experts.” A simple living mindset means cutting through the noise to find the basic truths. Ask: Who gains? What’s the real motive? 3. Trust Your Instincts: Your gut is a powerful guide. If a narrative feels coercive or wrong, don’t ignore it. Your intuition often catches what your mind misses. 4. Resist Compliance: Propaganda banks on obedience. Push back, especially when compliance feels forced. In a post-COVID world, saying “no” to blind conformity is a radical act of freedom. Keep fighting for a world where truth trumps control.

5. Read This Blog: Question everything it says.

Join the Simple Living Rebellion
The world needs skeptics, thinkers, and rebels—people who refuse to comply with the lies. Simple living means rejecting mental clutter and standing firm against manipulation. 

A small group of determined individuals can dismantle this “Empire of Deception” and lead the way to truth and change.  According to Margaret Mead, those small groups of indiviuals are the only thing that has ever led to change.
At my blog, I’m not buying their stuff, or their nonsense demands and brainwashing. That’s the start. 

What’s one moment you questioned propaganda and the official narrative and found your own truth? 

Share in a comment below. 

Let’s build a community that values autonomy over compliance, and truth over the lies and deceptions of the sort that Bernays weaponized with his books.

September 22, 2025

100 Questions for Contemplation



I don’t have any answers. Sorry.

But I have plenty of questions. 

Endless questions. 

I guess you could say I am a very curious, inquisitive person prone to periods of prolonged contemplation.

A lot of my questions are included in the list below that I found during a search for images on intrinsic happiness.

Considering these queries one at at a time could form the basis of a daily mindfulness/contemplation practice that could eventually provide much needed and elusive answers.

My latest personal favourite that I have been asking myself during my daily time in my morning contemplation corner is, 

''What emotional and/or mental blocks are preventing me from becoming the best person I can be?''


In closing this post, I have a final question. Why only 100 questions when life confronts us with infinite questions daily?

Why not 200 questions? 2000 questions? Too much of a good thing, perhaps.

However, if we were to expand on this excellent list, what life changing question, or questions would you add

Share your contemplative queries in our comment section below.












September 19, 2025

50 Ways to Leave Your Stuff






With apologies to Paul Simon for butchering his song… maybe he is a minimalist.

"The problem is all inside your head," I say to you 
The answer is easy if you take it logically" 
I'd like to help you in your struggle to be free 
There must be 50 ways to leave your stuff

I say, "It's really not my habit to intrude 
Furthermore, I hope my meaning won't be lost or misconstrued" 
But I'll repeat myself at the risk of being crude 
There must be 50 ways to leave your stuff 
50 ways to leave your stuff

You just slip it out the back, Jack 
Make a donation plan, Stan 
You don't need that toy, Roy 
Just get yourself free
Put it on the bus, Gus 
You don't need to discuss much 
Just drop it off at the 1st second hand store you see, Lee 
And get yourself free


Consumer nations generally have a bad relationship with stuff - we carry lots of baggage. It is mostly easier to acquire than to get rid of. 

But, like Paul Simon’s 1975 song 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover, there are also many ways to leave your bad relationship with unwanted stuff behind you. 

Inspired by Simon’s song, I brainstormed some lyrics around getting rid of unwanted baggage, and setting ourselves free. Some are serious, others not so much.


1. Put it at the curb, Herb. 

2. Throw it away, Ray. 

3. Sell it in a pawn shop, Pop.

4. Put it on a rocket to space, Grace.

5. Regift that unwanted present, Kent.

6. Throw a yard sale, Gail.

7. Take it to the dump, Gump.

8. Bury it in the yard, Marg.

9. Do a declutter, Sutter.

10. Donate to Goodwill, Bill.


There are many more that come to mind, but you get the idea. 

I was going to suggest ‘'Put it in pile to burn, Vern'', but that is probably not the best alternative, as satisfying as it may be.

I hope this helps you in your personal struggle to be free of the tyranny of unwanted, unloved, and unnecessary stuff. 

Or at least helps you to have a laugh at it all, and gain a new, fresh perspective.

What are the ways you leave your stuff? 

Stuff, not lovers. Paul Simon already covered that one.






September 17, 2025

The Great Green Grift


Welcome to the Great Green Grift—where noble intentions drown in a sea of hypocrisy and cash, and the planet’s salvation is just another lucrative market for the 1% that already own about half the world’s wealth. 

The climate crisis, soon to be an ‘emergency’, we’re told, is humanity’s existential threat, and CO2’s the villain, warming the Earth by 1.1°C since the Industrial Revolution (IPCC’s numbers).

It seems obvious that change is happening, but the solutions? 

They’re less about saving anything and more about fattening wallets. Welcome to the Great Green Grift, where hyperbolic eco-heros and corporate sharks team up to screw the rest of us, all while cloaked in superhero capes in shades of glorious green stitched together with vines of virtue. Take carbon credits, the indulgences of the 21st century. You pay a fee to offset your carbon “sins”—say, an international flight—and some company promises to plant a tree in Borneo. Half the time, those trees are already there, or they’re cut down for palm oil before you’ve unpacked your suitcase. 

The global carbon market’s worth over $800 billion, yet emissions keep climbing. Funny how the mansions of the rich are lit up like Vegas while they lecture us to unplug our toasters. It’s performance art for profit, with the greenwashing on the outside masking the greed on the inside. Then there’s the renewable energy racket. Wind turbines and solar panels sound great, until you see the strip-mined cobalt for batteries or the used turbine blades being buried because there is nothing else that can be done with them. 

They have been lying about everything else, what makes us think they are all of a sudden telling the truth about all of this?

Subsidies for green tech are a goldmine for corporations with about $1 trillion globally in 2022. Meanwhile, your energy bill spikes because “sustainable” grids struggle to keep the lights on. 

The 1% don’t care. Their Tesla charges just fine at their third vacation home. And the greenwashing continues. BP rebranded as “Beyond Petroleum” while spilling oil like drunken frat boys spilling beer. It’s a shameless move of optics over action.

It’s not about the planet; it’s about control and cash, just like the failed global COVID response (or worse, did it turn out exactly the way the wanted it to?). If so, what is their real agenda with the manufactured climate panic? Sure, CO2 traps heat—physics doesn’t lie. But the apocalyptic prophecies? Often overcooked models that ignore methane, solar cycles, or plain old human adaptability. 

The green grift, and others like it, thrive on fear, not facts, peddling panic to the masses while the 1% pocket the proceeds. 

So, next time you’re told to eat bugs to save the Earth, ask why Klaus Schwab’s still eating steak. The planet might warm, but the real heat’s coming from the great green grift burning a hole in our wallets.

Like all the movements prior, environmentalism has been long co-opted and transformed into yet another get rich scheme for the already wealthy.

If they were truly green, they would give up their riches and adopt voluntary simplicity, and how many of them that you know of are currently doing that?

Leading by example is a solid principle. People watch what you do more closely than what you say. Action has more impact than words.

Is the real existential threat a changing climate, or is it the grift and power grab of governments and the one percenters?









September 10, 2025

Calmcation + Quitcation = Simplification





A calmcation sounds kind of nice - a vacation where you actually get what a vacation was always supposed to give you - rest and relaxation so you can return to the grind feeling refreshed and ready to increase productivity for the benefit of shareholders. 

I am partial to staycations, but a calmcation is definitely preferred if the alternative is a busycation. 




The simple life can be a constant calmcation compared to a chaotic consumer life. It is a staycation that provides all the peace and calm that one would need, right where you are at. 

Calmcationers seek quiet and tranquility while on holiday, and travel providers are going with that until the next trend hits. They are putting together pre-made packages to spoon feed rattled workers on the brink of burnout.





It is a good idea, but if serenity, mindfulness, and being present are goals, getting off the treadmill permanently to craft a simpler life is an option that can be considered.

You could call it a Quitcation. 

That was the brand of break Linda and I took 25 years ago, after starting with a one year long sabbatical/calmcation (except we called it escaping the rat race) during which we traveled the world. After that it turned into a two year sabbatical so we could extend our epic calmcation, and when that ended, it turned into a quitcation to pursue the simple life more ardently.






Not that we never needed to work again, but since we left on this journey, we have been working to live, rather than living to work. That alone changed our entire perspective on life.

Stress levels returned to healthy, manageable levels as soon as unnecessary striving and struggling was eliminated. 




Begin with a calmcation to restore your peace, embrace a quitcation to break free, and transform that solace from modern life’s chaos into a lasting sanctuary in simplicity.

It worked for us, and it can work for you, too.

As Lily Tomlin said, ''for fast acting relief, try slowing down.''






September 7, 2025

Still Not Happy





The consumerism lie is a whopper that goes against thousands of years of human experience.

The lie? 

That life would suck without a bunch of stuff you don't need, and that we all need more of it. And if we can't get more, we will not be happy.

Are we to believe that before consumerism no one was ever happy? 

Before there was air travel, were people happy? 

Before cars? 

Before fast food?

Before computers and smart phones?

Before vinyl siding, forever chemicals, and big box stores?

Of course they were.

Most likely though, they were happier (and healthier) than we are today. That’s progress, folks.

Consumerism isn't to make us happier. It is to make the pushers of stuff happier.

Will more crap will make us happier?

In my experience the opposite is more accurate. Over the years as my minimalism has maximalized, I find myself with less and less stuff, and more and more happiness.

Upon investigation, all the evidence across the eons shows us that collecting a stuff we don’t need, and making our happiness dependent on that, was never a good idea, and it still isn’t.

And that is no lie.