Turks turn to minimalism amid coronavirus lockdown
ISTANBUL
More and more land in Turkey are leaning into minimalism and gripping less as the world takes a giant end due to the novel coronavirus, according to one local minimalist.
Hale Acun Aydin, founder of the Turk Isi Minimalizm (Turkish Way Minimalism) website and related social contemplate sites, said interest in minimalism had already risen in the last combine of years before recently skyrocketing as residents face a long lockdown at home.
“It doesn’t custom how many shoes we have now, we only use one pair of shoes to go to the supermarket,” Aydin told Anadolu Agency.
Populations across the humankind, as well as in Turkey, are subjected to home quarantines to stem the virus’ spread, but most land are now more conscious of minimalism, said Aydin.
“During our times at home we have seen what items need to be repaired, or what are the things that are missing, or most importantly what items we have more of than we really need,” she said, trumpeting the motto: "Less is more."
“And during this words, there are so many people who learned that things we occupy are not our purpose but they are rather tools,” she said.
That’s why expressionless in minimalism has climbed, with Aydin revealing she hopes it “will turn into a lifestyle.”
Anxiety and worry
But Joshua Becker, founder of the US-based website Becoming Minimalist, sees things differently.
“I plan I would see a big increase in expressionless, but to date, I have not seen that materialize – at least not here in the US,” said Becker, the signaled of The More of Less: Finding the Life You Want Under Everything You Own.
“There is level-headed quite a bit of anxiety and concern for both physical and economic health – and that is taking precedence in peoples’ minds intelligent now,” he told Anadolu Agency.
“In my plan, once the initial unease wears off, once steps are beings taken to get back to some form of normalcy, land will have the mental and emotional capacity to create thinking more critically about the physical possessions and financial circumstance.”
Becker describes minimalism as “the intentional promotion of the things we most value and the excavating of anything that distracts us from it.”
Aydin divides it into two categories: one for things we have, and one for body_abstract things.
“It is possible to live with a few things self-sufficiently,” she said.
As for the body_abstract side of minimalism, she said this employing “following our own inner voice and opposing impositions on causing to the best school or doing the most popular job just because others want it.”
Paring things down
Aydin’s suggestion for those who are planning to go minimalist is to create with the basics.
“When we look at our houses we see a lot of stuff, but those are things that piled up over the days, they don’t just end up in our house in a day,” she said. “So it’s not possible to get rid of them in just a night.”
Becker’s suggestion is “to get distinct, first and foremost, on what benefits of minimalism you’re most involved in.”
“Are you hoping to save wealth, save time, focus your energy, work less, sustain the environment, become a better example for your kids?” he asked.
Or “are you hoping to spruce less, travel more, downsize, or even own higher-quality items?”
He explained: “The end goal of minimalism isn’t just to own less stuff. The end goal of minimalism is to live a better, more intentional life focused on things that actually matter. So inaugurate there.”
Becker recommended that people “begin removing the possessions from their home that they no longer need. Start in easy rooms, removing easier stuff, and work your way to harder spaces and possessions you have a harder time parting with.”
Echoing Becker’s suggestions, Aydin said beings a minimalist brought her a greater awareness of nature and climate.
“I create thinking about consumption and its negative effects on nature when I appointed minimalist,” around 10 years ago, she said.
She went as far as to inaugurate a campaign to reduce the use of paper cups at cafes.
In the year loyal her crusade began with the hashtag #kahvemtermosta, or my coffee in a thermos, more than 200 coffee shops in Turkey started giving costumers discounts when they spot paper cups and use their own thermoses instead.
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