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I don't know about you, but it's hard for me to not want stuff. Perhaps women have that 'gatherer' trait ingrained. We don't spend all our days gathering nourishment and sustenance anymore, so we've moved on to harvesting wants or desirables. Part of why I love our small island life is we are shut off from consumerism, on a big scale anyway. I guess you could label me an "anti-consumerist'. I avoid chain stores and mass-produced as much as I can. The appalling air and lighting in shopping centres naturally deters me from entering anyway. But I'm not going to sit here and make out I don't enjoy wandering markets and specialty stores. What is it about shopping? Why do we enjoy touching, seeing and smelling new things? I wish I knew.
On the flip side, burrowing further and deeper has led me to discover some lovely bloggers who seem to be a bit more like me. People who get excited when they dig up a real op shop treasure. Folks who have outdated mismatched furniture, crumbs on the floor and kids wearing hand-me-downs or home-made. Tree hugging writers who think about food miles and free-trade, chemical free cleaning, whole-food living and recycling. People who celebrate simplicity in general. Ah, kindred spirits. You know who you are! Thank you for keeping it real and giving me SO MUCH inspiration. xxx
4 comments:
This is a great post Michelle. I have only been blogging for 6 months. I was hesitant at first but I love it. A creative outlet for me, a record of our family life and to see that the everyday is "interesting". The surprise for me has been the blog "community". Wonderful kindred spirits and lots of inspiration. Have a great week xo
Love this Michelle. I've got some time tonight and I've been wandering around your blog. Very beautiful imagery and words. The consumerism thing is hard isn't it. I love that you stop to think about it. Sometimes I find myself aching to buy something to get that instant fix of something new to play with. But I"m really trying to support the good people and places that make stuff rather than the mass produced. It ain't always easy. And by the way you live in a beautiful spot. It looks so peaceful. Nat x
Thanks for your thoughts on this Nat - I agree, it IS hard. I find many people are uncomfortable talking about the pitfalls of consumerism. Supporting locally handmade industries is important...thankfully it's becoming more prevalent.
love this xxxx
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