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MAGDA
MACMILLAN has a new life.
She wears old clothes, drives an aging car and recycles so thoroughly
she can fit a weeks worth of garbage into a shoebox. A buyer in
Stanfords procurement department, she gave up a high-stress job
at Lockheed Martin, where she was a contract administrator on the Hubble
Space Telescope Project. And MacMillan, 61, couldnt be happier.
Im having a lovely time, she says. Life is a constant
delight.
Across town, Hilary Hug, 91, lives with eight other adultsincluding
two fellow Stanford graduates, Robin Bayer, 89, and David Muffly,
88and 2-year-old twins. Hug and her housemates do not own
cars; they bike everywhere, and grow organic food. Her clothes are
secondhand. There are times I have to sit down and ask whether Im
living the way I want to be living, Hug says. I come back
to the fact that I love my life.
Four hundred miles south, in Venice, Calif., Jeff Carson is doing pretty
much whatever he wants, whenever he wants. A self-employed mortgage broker,
Carson, 86, who rents an apartment and watches expenses closely,
chooses when and how much to work. He is taking night classes in landscape
architecture and working on a documentary about the gentrification of
a Venice neighborhood. The autonomy I have is hard to match in the
dominant culture, he says.
The dominant culture? You know the onethe 8-to-whenever work world,
commute attached; the gadgety, always-on, 500-channel, 36-button, can
you explain how I work this remote? world. Lately, more and more
folks, like MacMillan, Hug and Carson, are choosing to step off the treadmill.
Throughout the United States, people are wondering whether what they have
is what they want. On the heels of an unprecedented economic boomnow
sinking, it seems, into a prolonged downturn exacerbated by the recent
terrorist attackthere are signs that disillusionment is widespread,
and that many people with the skills and options to do so are choosing
lives outside the mainstream. Taking back their free time,
buying less, emphasizing relationships over career trajectories, they
may constitute a new group enforcing an ancient valuesimplicity.
In the end, though, this trend may be defined less by its community than
by one simple, guiding principle: to each his or her own.
However it is defined, the notion of making conscious choices about consumption,
lifestyle and career to reduce stress and promote fulfillment has been
gaining momentum for the past decade. According to Gerald Celente, director
and founder of the Trends Research Institute in New York, an estimated
20 million people say they are fashioning lives based on this notion.
What does it mean to lead a simpler life? Can anybody do it? And, once
achieved, is it truly fulfilling?
Cecile Andrews has been trying to answer those questions for almost 20
years. Her book, The Circle of Simplicity: Return to the Good Life
(HarperCollins, 1997), placed her near the center of the voluntary
simplicity movement, and she remains one of its leading advocates.
Since 1998, in conjunction with the Glendale, Calif.-based nonprofit Seeds
of Simplicity, Andrews, EdD 84, has helped set up more than 100
simplicity circles around the country in which people gather
to discuss how they live and how they would like to live. The groups are
seedpods for a movement that means different things to different people.
On one end of the spectrum, says Andrews, are the extreme simplifiers
who wear only secondhand clothes, dont own cars, recycle everything
and either raise their own food or cart off the bruised leftovers from
the grocery store. Near the center are people who have switched to less
stressful jobs or cut back their work schedules to have more time for
other things. And then there are those who merely seek to be more deliberate
about their choices, trivial and otherwiseeverything from whether
they can do without that latte every morning to whether they should live
closer to their childrens grandparents. Ultimately, says Andrews,
its about taking control of ones life.
Some people think simplicity is about self-deprivation or moving
to the woods, but what Im talking about is how to enjoy life more
right where you are, says Andrews.
Simplicity begins by asking some questions. How much is enough? What do
I care about? What gives me joy? Do I really need this?
ON A WARM, sunny Saturday morning in August,
about 20 people have risen early to gather at the Stanford Center for
Research in Disease Prevention. Outside the door to the drab meeting room
is an unobtrusive sign: A Simpler Life: Less Stress, More Joy &
Balance in Your Personal and Professional Life.
Andrews stands in the front of the room wearing a cream-colored skirt
and vest, a cheap black sports watch and a water bottle slung in a hikers
carrier. Before anyone spends too much time nervously glancing around,
Andrews asks the participants to turn to a neighbor and say what brought
them here.
I feel like Im running a marathon all the time, says
one woman.
Im tired of all the stuff, says another, adding that
her house is jammed with 15 computers (her husband is a programmer) and
an entertainment center bristling with equipment. I dont want
eight remote controls anymore.
Andrews is used to these complaints. In fact, many people come to her
workshops hoping shell help them clear up a cluttered closet. What
do I know about that? she asks rhetorically, then smiles. Little
do they know what this movement is really about.
Clutter is only a catalyst to profound questioning about ones life,
she says. Each of us is at a different point in perceiving what
is desirable versus necessary; what is complex versus simple. The necessary
thing is to begin to examine your life.
And so, she tells the simplicity seekers in the room, this movement
asks you to consider the consequences of your actions on your well-being
and the environment. Before long, those small, annoying pinpricks
of disenchantment become a huge discussion about nearly everything that
can touch a life: how overwork leads to overconsumption, to health problems,
to the fracturing of human relations and community and to the destruction
of the environment. As the meeting breaks up, everyone agrees to implement
some small change and report back the following week.
The circles are helpful because you are trying to live differently
from the majority culture, says Magda MacMillan, who has been part
of a monthly circle in Palo Alto since 1999. The others live like
you do. You can be weird together.
Jeff Carson, on the other hand, has never been to a simplicity circle
and doesnt even identify himself as a simplifier. But he acknowledges
that hes drawn to like-minded people. Most of my friends are
quasi-bohemians, he says.
SOME SIMPLICITY ADVOCATES
are dubious that these meetings accomplish much.
If you want society to move toward simplicity, you need to change
the socioeconomic environment, says Jerome Segal, author of Graceful
Simplicity: Toward a Philosophy and Politics of Simple Living (Holt,
1999) and philosopher at the University of Marylands Institute for
Philosophy and Public Policy. The barriers to simplicity are structural
and fundamental, he says. For example, he notes, at the beginning of the
20th century, households devoted 1 to 2 percent of their spending after
taxes to transportation; now its 19 percent. It wasnt
that people suddenly developed an insatiable appetite for cars, but the
distance between home and work changed. Women entered the workforce in
significant numbers, and families needed two cars. The conditions of cities
changed, and people moved to the suburbs to escape crime and find better
schools, Segal says. I could do the same analysis with housing.
We need to ask the question, What is the economy for?"
SEGAL
IS CORRECT TO FOCUS on the big picture,
says Andrews, but she insists that a movement cant be built from
the top down. It is important to get people together and talk about
the way we are living, she says. In these conversations, we
are addressing not only the personal but the societal. Remember what John
Dewey said: Democracy is born in conversation.
Andrewss interest in the
simplicity movement traces back to the late 1970s when she worked with
the Quaker-run Voluntary International Service Assignment. For two years
in Winston-Salem, N.C., Andrews set up after-school programs for low-income
African-American neighborhoods. I got to see firsthand that although
the poor didnt have a lot, they had so much more sense of community
than I had growing up in the suburbs of Washington state, she says.
When Andrews first hit on the
idea of teaching others how to live simply, the public response was tepid.
After earning her doctorate at the School of Education, she returned to
Seattle as an administrator at North Seattle Community College. In 1989,
she offered a class on voluntary simplicity. Only four people showed
up, and we had to cancel it, she says. In 1992, when she offered
it again, 175 signed up. The next quarter, 200. Esquire magazine did a
story in 1993 about simplicity, quoting Andrews. Soon she received a call
from an editor at HarperCollins asking if she had ever thought of doing
a book on the topic. That led to the publication of The Circle of Simplicity.
Now an affiliated scholar at
Stanfords Institute for Research on Women and Gender, Andrews is
researching the connection between the simplicity movement and the womens
movement; shes teaching classes in Stanfords Health Improvement
Program; shes working with Continuing Studies and speaking to a
plethora of campus groups. At Stanford, she believes shes found
the ideal audience, people who are well-versed in critical thinking and
can effect profound change. Its also an audience that she thinks
is ripe to rethink its definition of success.
IF JEFF CARSON HAD EMULATED
most of his Stanford friends, hed have augmented his economics degree
with an mba and ended up at a management consulting job or at a bank,
flipping bonds. But at some point early in his working life, the well-trodden
path lost its appeal. It didnt seem it would set me up for
what I wanted from life, he says. What he wanted was time.
In 1992, he left his commercial
real estate job in Washington, D.C., visited South America, and moved
to Venice, Calif., where he now works for himself. It hasnt been
easy to change the mindset that suggests worth is related to career achievement.
After I come back from a job in New York, some of the majority cultures
values creep in, he says. You tend to turn your critical faculties
on your life and lose your momentum. You find yourself attacking yourself.
Most of Hilary Hugs peers
went on to business or law school or are earning doctorates. Hug, who
majored in human biology, works at Magic, a nonprofit in Palo Alto that
teaches people to apply ecology to live better. For the first 20
years of my life, I was an approval junkie, she says. I got
the teachers attention, the awards, the accolades. But when I stepped
outside of the mainstream path, I had to let go of that. It was really
hard.
For people graduating from
top institutions like Stanford, there is something akin to a schizophrenic
pull, Andrews says. On the one hand, you learn to think critically,
to examine the unintended consequences of your actions and policies. You
learn the immense pleasure of the life of the mind. And yet there is an
expectation, sometimes not so implicit, that you graduate, secure an important,
influential job with an enviable income and acquire the accoutrements
of material success. Which necessarily means less time for self-reflection,
community involvement and relationships.
The problem with the simplicity
movement, critics say, is that not everybody can afford it. Youll
always have a small group of people who have made it, who can sell their
houses that have appreciated wildly, and trade down, says futurist
Roger Selbert, editor and publisher of Growth Strategies in Santa
Monica and a principal at the Growth Strategies Group. This does
not make a movement of any consequence. Our big problem is that we have
an overwhelming amount of choices.
He notes that recently launched
glossy magazines like Real Simple and SIMPLYCITY are chock-full
of advertisements for pricey clothes, handheld computers, cars and cosmetics.
Clearly, he says, a well-moneyed market has been identified among members
of the simplicity crowd.
And not all those who simplify
stick with it. They make a lot of money, retire early and eventually
get bored, says Selbert. They find the simple lifebaking
your own bread, growing your food, biking everywhereis nasty, brutish
and short. They like the thrill of the fast pace, and they jump back into
the game.
Sure, its a middle-class
movement, Andrews says. That doesnt invalidate it. Those
in the middle class do the most consuming and work the longest hours,
and they have found that affluence is not what they expected.
Regardless of whether simplifiers
become a full-fledged movement capable of exerting societal change, Andrews
says, dwindling natural resources may one day force everyone to cut back.
Carson, for one, doesnt
need a push. I couldnt go back, he says. Mine
is not a perfect existence. I still havent landed on the path that
is right for me, but I know Im a lot closer than if Id stayed
mainstream and refused to ask questions about the way I was living.
Nina Schuyler,86, is a freelance writer
living in San Francisco.
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