Real Life Minimalists: This Tiny Asteroid

Every Monday I post Real Life Minimalists, a profile of one of my readers in their own words. If you’d like to participate, click here for details.

This week, I’m happy to present the story of This Tiny Asteroid. To read more about how she balances motherhood and minimalism, please visit her wonderful blog.

This Tiny Asteroid writes:

ms-thistinyasteroid

Photo: this tiny asteroid

After graduating from college over ten years ago, I had every intention of following the simple living and minimalist path. My husband and I lived in a studio apartment for five years. We saved money with our cheap rent and spent it on travel. We’ve hitchhiked in Alaska, lived in a camper van in New Zealand, and explored Macchu Picchu together. We thought that if we could live in such tight quarters for years, we were solid. Instead the real challenge happened after buying a home and having a child. We started to renovate and to accumulate stuff. Our clutter acted like a phantom load on my energy, drawing my attention away from what really mattered. I was spending too much time acquiring things (even though thrifted), rearranging, organizing, storing and maintaining them.

With a second child on the way, I’ve been nesting and purging our home with a vengeance and finding my way back to a pared-down life. However, there are parts of my life I fully appreciate right now and would not give up to be an ultra-marathoner of minimalism: my family, our house which provides some rental income (we have a duplex), our nano-farm garden that provides fresh produce, and my crafts which are a form of creative expression. This Tiny Asteroid is a combination mama and minimalist journey blog – I read both types of blogs, but haven’t seen many that bridge the two. I’m working on a series of posts on the Minimalist Baby which I hope to publish someday.

We dream of working part-time, creating a small business (TBD), and home-un-schooling our children. Our ultimate ambition is to set off on an adventure in the next five or six years, maybe live on a sailboat, or in a tiny beach cottage? I’m trying to take it one day at a time and follow my heart.


www.tinyasteroid.com
http://twitter.com/tinyasteroid

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Related posts:

  1. Real Life Minimalists: A Working Rachel
  2. Real Life Minimalists: Jenna Ann
  3. Real Life Minimalists: Jesse

6 comments to Real Life Minimalists: This Tiny Asteroid

  • Rose

    It’s so nice to hear from a minimalist mother! I’ll definitely be following your blog to learn how you balance simplicity and having a family.

  • ellak

    Thanks for sharing your story, TTA. I love the way you are living life according to your dreams and values. And that’s so exciting to have a second little one on the way. :-)

  • even_simpler

    A little garden, a small business, and a beach cottage; that sounds like such a nice plan!

  • How wonderful for you to be able to enjoy the journeys that you did before settling down to the business of ‘adulthood’. Yes life does have a habit of sneaking up on you and just so you know, it’s the house’s fault, for the clutter I mean. While you are sleeping it is breeding it, so it’s not your fault. Kudos to you for taking charge and ordering it out the door. I wish you and your kids great adventures in the next few years and these will be memories that will last their lifetimes so I hope you are able to share all with them that you hope to. Thanks for sharing your story with us.

  • JustJenna

    Thank you for sharing this, Tiny Asteroid, it’s very inspiring.

  • nyxmoxie

    Hey awesome story! But minimalism means different things to everyone, I certainly don’t judge you for needing to buy things for your kids, or for having a house. I don’t have just 100 items, but I don’t have too many items. I know how much stuff I need to be comfortable with and don’t take it to excess. Usually if I don’t find myself using something at the end of the month then I give it away or throw it away. That keeps me in check and I avoid having too much stuff through using that method.

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