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With a quick search through the web you can find several blog posts and videos regarding the idea: “dispose of your stuff to be mentally free”. Though there is a great deal of truth in this kind of narrative, I feel compelled to examine such ideas deeper when I see only the one side of the coin.
So to explore the complexity of the matter, I have gathered three ideas of why we buy so much stuff and why it’s reasonable to connect with some things. I tried my best to embed several theories, both spiritual and scientific, to hopefully showcase both sides of the coin.
Is ownership an Illusion?
Eckhart Tolle describes ownership as a mental concept in which everyone agrees with you that you have possession of a particular thing or service. For example, you have paperwork to prove that you own or rent a house. In case you persistently claim that you owned the apartment you rent, the actual owner might laugh at you, thinking you are crazy.
Ownership is like a system that is based on millions upon millions of agreements that people make with each other.
But the baseline of this extremely useful system consists of nothing more substantial than stories we tell to each other and most importantly to ourselves.
That’s the point Tolle makes. The entanglement of self with things. The story that things are in a way part of who you are as a person.
So this means that if you want to experience a lessened ego you’ll have to sell all your stuff?
Well, it is not that simple.
Jun 20, 2020
7 min

A book review for “Man’s search for meaning”
Imagine for a brief moment what it would be like to live in a concentration camp. Your perspective of the world would change dramatically. Beyond the 3 stages that the inmates experienced, Victor Frankl, in his book “Man’s search for meaning” describes his 3-year experience as an inmate coming from the perspective of a psychoanalyst.
If you have trouble imagining yourself as an inmate, the book contains vivid descriptions of the mental and physical abuse that the inmates suffered.
It is extraordinary the numerous life lessons that this book provides. Especially from a man who was walking almost barefoot in the snow, working as a slave with one meal of soup (mainly boiled water), and experienced torture in a mental as well as on a physical level.
Entering the reality of Auschwitz, human decency and the value of life was as scarce as food and proper clothing. The inmate was being transformed into a number (which was visible either in his uniform or jacket. The sole purpose of the concentration camps was to take every ounce of any inmate’s energy and then be disposed of him or her.
Read the full article at https://bit.ly/2znXD60
Jun 9, 2020
7 min

In this story, I will “steal” the best ideas from the magnificent and enlightening book, 1984 written by George Orwell. I’ll do my best to present and mix them with some of my personal stories and correlate them with other fascinating ideas with the hope to move you intellectually as well as practically, meaning some of the ideas can be put to use effectively. If you are worried that by reading this article I will “spoil” you the book’s plot for you, I assure you that the fragments I used serve as a medium of comprehending the ideas rather than providing information about the main character or the overall story.
Read the Medium story here
May 31, 2020
8 min
