Read Minimalism: Live a Meaningful Life Online
Authors: Joshua Fields Millburn,Ryan Nicodemus
Tags: #Minimalism, #Non-Fiction, #Psychology, #Reference, #Self-Help
We all know that sitting on the couch, eating potato chips, and watching TV isn’t the path to a healthy lifestyle. But there is a common misconception that you must live on the other side of the exercise continuum to be healthy—as if you must run five miles every day, go to the gym four days a week, and be able to bench press a small European vehicle to be fit. But this isn’t true.
Defining Exercise
We aren’t concerned with looking like body builders with our vanity muscles bulging through our shirts. Instead, we’re concerned about being healthy, being fit, and feeling good about our physical fitness. Over the last few years, we’ve tried several things that have worked for us (and many other things that haven’t), and during this time we determined that the most important measurements of success were not measured in pounds on a scale, but rather by two things:
That’s how we measure our success. Because, face it, you could lose all the weight you want but still not be happy with your physical fitness. In fact, this happened to Joshua.
Through a combination of pescatarianism and intermittent fasting, Joshua lost 70 pounds over a two-year span. On the surface this sounds great, and it certainly was a good thing. But, by age 28, even though he was 70 pounds lighter, he was flabby, doughy, and weak. But over two years, he developed small, simple daily habits that transformed him into the best shape of his life by age 30.
Daily Exercise Habits
We’ve both tried a bunch of different exercise techniques to improve our health over the last two years. We’ve gone to the gym four to six times per week. We’ve attempted running, lifting weights, playing sports, and a ton of other ways to exercise. And the good news is that they all work. Granted, some work better than others, but every exercise we’ve done has been better than doing nothing at all (which, often, was what we did before—nothing).
After experimenting with different exercises for two years and speaking with several personal trainers, Joshua wrote about the daily exercise habits he had developed in an essay titled “18 Minute Minimalist Exercises.” That essay outlined his simple exercise habits, including the three principles and four exercises he embraces daily.
Joshua's Exercise Principles
Joshua's 18 Minute Exercises
Honestly, 18 minutes sounds like an arbitrary number—that’s because it is. When I started these bodyweight exercises, I didn’t have a specific window of time in mind. But I timed myself and discovered that almost every time I hit the park for my exercises, I was worn out within 18 minutes. Thus, these are my 18-minute exercises (all of which exercises you can do in your living room, outdoors, or just about anywhere else—even outside during a thunderstorm).
During my 18 minutes, I usually alternate between the following exercises. You can of course pepper in your own favorite exercises as well. And, yes, these exercises are suitable for men and women.
I don’t have a specific routine or plan, I just take a 30-second break between sets, bouncing from one exercise to the next. After about 18 minutes, I’m completely spent, and I feel great afterward. I get that incredible tired feeling you get after a great workout. What used to be tedious is now exhilarating.
You can work your way up, even if you can’t do a single pull-up or push-up. Everyone has 18 minutes per day to focus on his or her health, right?
Sleep
People often forgo sleep to “accomplish” whatever it is they want to accomplish. But if it is your desire to live a healthy life—in the optimal condition to experience and enjoy life—then you will need enough rest.
We believe the amount of sleep your body requires varies by individual. Some of the most compelling studies we’ve read show that you should average eight to ten hours of sleep every night. The best essay we’ve seen about sleep can be found here:
How to Get Smarter, Sleep More, and Get More Sex
by Julien Smith at inoveryourhead.net/sleep-is-awesome/
The Musts of Health
We strongly believe in turning your
shoulds
into
musts
. When you want to change a habit—be it diet, exercise, or anything else—this is the tipping point, this is the point in which you create enough leverage, this is the point in which something you put off becomes urgent, necessary, vital. This is the point at which change becomes a
must
.
On our website, we encourage people to create
must
lists for various areas of their lives (i.e., we encourage you to create a list of things on which you have procrastinated, and turn those
shoulds
into
musts
—find leverage so you can take action). There are very few
musts
with respect to your health, and these
musts
are fairly broad:
We encourage you to create your own
must
list. What
must
you do to experience a better, healthier life?
CHAPTER 3: RELATIONSHIPS
The Importance of Relationships
Your relationships are the most important of the five dimensions of living a meaningful life. Don’t believe us? Let us prove it.
Imagine winning the lottery, getting into the best shape of your life, paying off all your debt, moving into your dream home (on the beach, of course), and not needing to work another day in your life.
Now imagine you wake up tomorrow and you have nobody to share your new life with. No friends. No family. No loved ones. Oh, the heartache. You finally got “everything you ever wanted,” but there’s no one to share it with. Without your relationships, you are unable to live a meaningful life.
Defining Relationships
Sometimes people use the word
relationship
to connote a physical or intimate relationship, but for the purposes of this book, we use a much broader definition: Your relationships are the people with whom you have frequent contact, the people around you—friends, partners, spouses, intimate relationships, roommates, co-workers, acquaintances, or anyone with whom you interact on a regular basis.
The bottom line is that we all want to be loved. We all want to love. And we all want to have other people with whom we share our experiences. Some of us (especially extroverts like Ryan) desire the love and attention of many relationships (his family, his close friends, his girlfriend, the people he mentors, etc.), while others (especially introverts like Joshua) desire the close connections of a select few relationships. Neither desire is right or wrong; your desire is simply based on your preferences, and no matter who you are, we all need our personal relationships to thrive.
Reflecting on Past Relationships
The past does not equal the future. Living in the past is tantamount to driving using only the rearview mirror—eventually you will crash if you don’t know what’s going on in front of you.
Because of this, your past relationships aren’t necessarily indicative of your future relationships. This is good news. Much of the time you don’t think about why you’re involved in a particular relationship; you just ended up there and accept that this is where you are, even when the relationship makes you unhappy.
You can learn from your past relationships though. The good times tell us what went well and give us a strategy by which you can model your future. And the bad times help you to identify how things went wrong and give you clues and social cues by which you can avoid bad relationships in the future. Everything is clearer in retrospect.
Three Ways to Create Better Relationships
There are three ways to create better relationships:
We will focus on all three possibilities with respect to your relationships throughout this chapter.
Evaluating Current Relationships
It’s time to take an honest look at your current relationships. Do they make you happy? Do they satisfy you? Are they supportive? Do they help you grow? Do they contribute to your life in positive, meaningful ways? These are all important questions to consider while evaluating your current relationships.
Praxis: Make a three-column list of every relationship—big or small—in which you are involved: