Posts Tagged ‘Minimalism’

January 25, 2013

“The New Certainties”: Minimalism, Motivational Speakers & Looking For New Stuff To Believe In etc.

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[The “Hugh­train” car­toon, 2004]

I’ve been seeing a pat­tern emer­ging. Here are some of the main ingredients:

1. That Marfa, Texas, one of the great Mini­ma­list shri­nes in Ame­rica is now a popu­lar hips­ter des­ti­na­tion spot.

2. One of my my favo­rite movies of recent years, Jiro Dreams of Sushi, which I’ve been raving about for months, is a big hit in the docu­men­tary world. It’s also a fil­mic love poem to Mini­ma­lism (Hey, the direc­tor used Phi­lip Glass and Max Rich­ter for the film score, I rest my case).

3. Blogs about sim­ple living and Mini­ma­lism seem to be really trendy these days, mini­ma­list blog­gers like Zen Habits con­que­ring the world.

4. “The Mini­ma­list” is one of the most popu­lar the­mes on Tumblr.

5. The con­ti­nuing rise of Wes­ter­ni­zed Eas­tern thought: Buddhism, medi­ta­tion, Yoga, Zen etc (I’m a big Alan Watts fan, but that’s another story).

6. The other thing I’ve noti­ced is “Per­so­nal Coaches” and “Moti­va­tio­nal Spea­kers” seem to be everywhere. Whether we’re tal­king Anthony Rob­bins or Bren­don Burchard… or the new job title out there, “spea­ke­rauthor” (Peo­ple known mostly for wri­ting books, but make most of their money doing public spea­king: Tom Peters, Mal­colm Glad­well etc.) Then you also need all the more tech­noc­ra­tic, busi­nesss­peak con­sul­tant man­da­rin types out there as well… Like I said, they’re everywhere, it seems to be an inc­rea­singly boo­ming industry.

7. That there seem to be more TED spea­kers tal­king about how won­der­ful Atheism is, than there are TED spea­kers telling peo­ple how won­der­ful Chris­tia­nity or Judaism or Islam is.

8. The gro­wing idea that the Inter­net is now a reli­gion.

9. The gro­wing idea that “Jedi” is now a religion.

10. The gro­wing idea that Apple is a religion.

11. The finan­cial and poli­ti­cal implosion/impasse/dog’s din­ner that is Wes­tern Europe/The Euro/The E.U..

12. U.S. Fis­cal Cliffs.

13. Envi­ron­men­tal and ani­mal rights activists.

14. Bur­ning Man.

15. Kicks­tar­ter.

16. Cha­rity Water.

I could go on.…

What does this tell me?

That we’re loo­king for new stuff to believe in.

That though the world is get­ting more and more com­plex, the old ans­wers (Do what you’re told, buy a lot of stuff, obsess about THESE cele­bri­ties, worship THESE gods/THIS God, watch this trashy Rea­lity TV, watch these crappy movies, read these crappy bes­tse­llers, lis­ten to this crappy music, believe these poli­ti­cians etc.) aren’t wor­king for us as well as they used to.

So we’re sim­plif­ying. We’re rene­wing. We’re clea­ring the decks. We’re doing a bit of spi­ri­tual Spring clea­ning. We’re loo­king for new stuff to believe in. We’re loo­king for NEW CERTAINTIES.

Just like the “Hugh­train” car­toon above implies, we have an infi­nite need for it.

Sure, we like our old cer­tain­ties (Mom’s coo­king, a favo­rite pair of old jeans, small-town folksy ways, old school good man­ners, Ronald Rea­gan, old Jimmy Ste­wart movies at Christ­mas time etc), we are gene­ti­cally pro­gram­med to seek out not only the new, but the NEW CERTAINTIES.

So I guess the next the ques­tion is, what “New Cer­tain­ties” is your work brin­ging to the world?

If you don’t know, maybe best to find out… it’s where the real fun and action is to be found these days.

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