Santa Fe New Mexican

The ‘less is more’ method

New book offers a practical and personal approach to paring down

- By Lindsey M. Roberts

There is a method, but no madness, to the type of minimalism espoused by Cary Telander Fortin and Kyle Louise Quilici. The organizing experts and authors of New Minimalism argue for something a little more practical than a strict 37-piece clothing wardrobe or a monastic-looking house.

“It’s not extreme, not hyper-industrial, not only for single men, but for everyone and looks however you want it to look,” Fortin says.

She and Quilici started developing this more practical take on the less-is-more lifestyle when they met at a 2011 yoga retreat in San Francisco. They discovered they were seeking a slower, calmer life; Fortin wanted to leave her corporate job and learn to live within new means, and Quilici was trying to put sustainabi­lity into better practice. Their mutual passion turned into a blog, the book and, in 2013, a business, also called New Minimalism, that helps clients find their own declutteri­ng way.

Fortin and Quilici are more about ending the cycle of “busy” than creating a perfect house. As Quilici explains: “Minimalism is a tool that you use to uncover what it is you want most in life and to get that space to breathe. It’s not the goal,” but a way of prioritizi­ng “working within the space of 24 hours a day, seven days a week.”

So how does this kinder, gentler method work? The two have some tips.

Identify your why

Before you dig in and sort your shoes, ask yourself why you are doing it. “Why is now the right time? What are you hoping to get from this? What do you want your space to feel like?” says Fortin, who now lives in Boise, Idaho. “If you start declutteri­ng before you know the answers, you’ll get lost along the way.” The clients who are clearest on their priorities are usually those going through a transition, she explains, such as an illness, a divorce or a new baby. They’re saying, “I want my stuff to work for me instead of me working for my stuff.”

Have someone with you

“It’s great if you can have a friend with you, rather than a partner who is invested,” Fortin advises. “Find someone who can bag up the stuff, donate, mend … and someone who can say, ‘I know you love that, but there’s a hole in the armpit.’ You want someone honest and kind.”

Start with your closet

The best part about beginning with your clothes is that “you don’t have to get buy-in from partners or kids,” Fortin says. “You can lead by example, and it’s a great, clarifying, universal place to start.”

Then go category by category

“We recommend the deep-dive approach,” Quilici says. “You do one category of things so that you’re done. Get back to zero. If you don’t have time to go through all of your clothes in one day, pick one subcategor­y that you can go through all at once: all jackets and tops. Then you can see the volume of what you have.”

Define what full is

Start with your boundary before you pare down. Tell yourself, “This house is big enough for my family,” and then make your stuff fit in it comfortabl­y. Or say, “This drawer is enough for my socks,” and discard solo, holey and uncomforta­ble socks until your sock collection fits comfortabl­y into that drawer. Once you’ve decluttere­d and you later open a cabinet or closet, enjoy the breathing room and tell yourself this is what full looks like.

Let one stand for many

Clearing out the sentimenta­l items is usually the hardest part of simplifyin­g, so Fortin and Quilici suggest letting one special item stand for a memory or person. If your grandmothe­r collected china but you have neither a love of china nor the space to store it, maybe keep a favorite teacup and saucer to remember her by, Fortin explains. “You have to think, ‘My grandmothe­r isn’t in this china.’ ”

Fewer things can mean better things

“You have to have durable, well-made things if you want to rely on two pairs of jeans and you wear them every day. There’s a little bit of an investment there,” Quilici says. In the long run, though, she and Fortin say they hope for a philosophi­cal shift in thankfulne­ss and appreciati­ng what we have. “We’re coming from a place of gratitude,” she says. “It’s a privileged conversati­on.”

Be a grateful gift receiver

Once you’ve simplified your possession­s, it’s OK to tell people about your preference­s for gifts for you or your kids, but it’s still important to be gracious. Allow gift receiving to be a “beautiful exchange of energy,” Fortin says, “and then if you use the toy later, great, but if you don’t, you can let it go.”

It won’t all look the same

After reducing your possession­s and schedules to a comfortabl­e place, it’s time to redecorate, move furniture around, position mementos as art, etc. Don’t worry about your minimalism looking like someone else’s or any magazine’s. As Fortin and Quilici write in their book, “Let your freak flag fly.” This is your minimalism, and it can look boho, funky, uncool or very cool.

Minimalism is about time

Think about what you would rather spend your time on than hunting for something in a drawer or organizing on the weekends. This motivation will help you get started, do the deep dive and then commit to the maintenanc­e.

Think about what you would rather spend your time on than hunting for something in a drawer.

 ?? KELLY ISHIKAWA ?? A photo from the book New Minimalism. Authors Cary Telander Fortin and Kyle Louise Quilici are more interested in ending the cycle of ‘busy’ than creating a perfect house.
KELLY ISHIKAWA A photo from the book New Minimalism. Authors Cary Telander Fortin and Kyle Louise Quilici are more interested in ending the cycle of ‘busy’ than creating a perfect house.
 ?? KELLY ISHIKAWA ?? Whether it’s boho, funky, cool or uncool, minimalism doesn’t have to look any one way.
KELLY ISHIKAWA Whether it’s boho, funky, cool or uncool, minimalism doesn’t have to look any one way.

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