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DON’T Fill the VOID—Embrace the Emptiness

Last week, co-author, Eric Riddle, of STUFFology 101 wrote about how temporal, mental, and physical clutter disrupts our routines. In an earlier post, he wrote about collecting boxes for his daughter’s move from her temporary accommodations in her parents’ home. I advised him, don’t try to fill the void after your daughter and granddaughter move.

We often try to fill the empty spaces in our lives. Beyond our physical surroundings; we feel lost when we encounter free time or even uncluttered thoughts. These vacuums tease us to fill them. We immediately say yes, to a new commitment of our time, after we let go of our membership in an organization. We spend countless hours engaged with social media. We go out and buy knickknacks to fill the counter space we just cleared.

A former aerospace colleague and his wife were model consumers. After retirement, they added to the many beautiful things throughout their home. They spent time each day to maintain their possessions, from his wife dusting daily to him working on his thirty or more acres of grazing lands, ponds, and virgin growth trees. While I enjoyed staying with them in their historic southern home, I felt frustrated trying to find a place to put my things. Nearly every horizontal surface was filled in the living room, dining room, kitchen, and bathroom.

I was raised in a cluttered home. I remember being shocked when my mother reacted with surprise to see a (very old) spice container I retrieved from the back of a kitchen drawer. Before I helped my father move into my California home, I found two and three of the same power tools. During his younger and pre-dementia days, he’d buy a new tool because he forgot he already had one. How can you own something and not know that you have it?

These experiences impressed upon me a desire to live a life of minimalism. While I am not quite there yet to live out of a backpack, I continue to let go of things.

Some letting go takes time. I am not one to advocate Kondo-style tossing. Decluttering takes time. Our possessions carry many of our life experiences, emotions, memories, and desires. It takes time to admit that my violin-playing days are over. I will need to let go.

We humans find it unnerving to embrace the emptiness in our lives. We eagerly try to fill the spaces. There is wisdom in: Less is more. Less brings us more time, the one thing we cannot recover in life.

Devils Punchbowl Sunrise Survivor Tree - Avadian photo

I wrote the following in an email to Eric recently, when he felt life’s diverse needs tugging unbearably hard at him: If you accept what I suggest—try NOT to fill the void. Experience it. Live in it. You need the space – mentally, emotionally, psychologically, and physically.

In my own life, after living in a toxic marriage for too long, divorce, and after, I find value in making myself whole. The therapist, across a dozen sessions, worried I might be holding back anger. She conceded that my choice to focus on me is how therapists are trained to help their clients proceed. Instead, fearing emptiness, many rush to find comfort in another human being. I embraced the void and life of freedom. What a joy to live untethered while I regain my footing and energy.

When we blindly fill the void, we don’t give ourselves the time and space to grow. We think we’re moving closer to our goals, but we’re simply defaulting to routines to fill in the emptiness. Take time to answer Magic Question 2: How will the area you’re focused on look, feel, smell, or sound, after you cleared the clutter?

Voids serve a valuable, though sometimes painful, purpose. They are an opening—a space to learn. IF we invite in what the emptiness may teach us, we will avert out-of-control lives built upon shaky foundations. We’ll shed those insecurities and constant stress.

Eric replied, “Thanks Brenda! I appreciate your insight and look forward to space in my life. Life is extremely full at the moment. Not a great situation as you know.”

Let us gain strength. Let us not give up. Let’s change parts of our life’s routines. Let us be aware and put in the effort to steer clear of lives lived in default mode.

Earlier this year, I wrote: Letting GO of Temporal and Mental Clutter to Let IN which delves more into the idea of letting in space.

Also read, What HAPPENED? Too much Time STUFF! to learn how we sabotage our space with physical clutter and engage in time-killing pursuits to create temporal clutter.

Clutter Disrupts Routine

I find comfort in the routine of daily life. But the cluttergories of life can easily disrupt your routine. What do I mean by that? Simply that physical, mental, and/or temporal clutter often disrupt our everyday routine and weekly plans in both simple and profound ways.

Consider Physical Clutter

It can be an eyesore, a trip hazard, or an emotional drain every time you see it. Perhaps all three! When my young granddaughter visits us, I am almost guaranteed to step on or trip over a toy she neglected to put away.

Consider Mental Clutter

As we note in STUFFology101: Get Your Mind Out of the Clutter: “Clutter of the mind includes emotions, regrets, and worries that drain us.” Fatigue makes it challenging to focus, and may lead to apathy, or even depression.

Consider Temporal Clutter

We each have various tasks to complete every day that are important to us. That routine can be interrupted by things ranging from overtime at work to a plumbing problem at home.

Clock face

Any combination of these cluttergories can and will disrupt your routine. A sense of being overwhelmed may result. At least that was the case for me over the last few weeks. For example, I neglected writing a blog post last Monday for this website.

Sometimes all we can do is keep up, and that’s okay. I was reminded of this by my co-author in a recent phone call. Not surprisingly, she has written on this topic before. ICYMI: “What HAPPENED? Too much Time STUFF!”

Take Action

Be aware that clutter is disrupting your routine. Take a few minutes for yourself. Maybe a short walk outside or a call to a friend. Go out for a family dinner. Do something to help your own mental attitude. Simple but not easy as the pace of life steadily moves faster and faster. Take action today and your routine will refresh itself anew.