Thursday, April 2, 2026

Via The Tricycle Community \\\ Three Teachings on De-Cluttering

 

Support the Tricycle community with a donation »
April 2, 2026

Simplify and Open Up 
 
Many of us can relate to the sight of clutter piling up on a desk or in a corner of the house: a slow build of obligation to be dealt with at some undetermined time. When the objects or documents we think we might need but haven’t given a home start to add up, we might notice a low, persistent hum of irritation. It may become more difficult to settle our minds in meditation or move freely from one task to the next. 

If any of this rings true, this week’s Three Teachings might offer the motivation you need to do a little spring cleaning. A professional organizer offers guidance for finding a place for your most-used objects and tips for shedding the rest. A Japanese Buddhist monk explains the cultural and spiritual significance of cleaning, and a writer reflects on the spaciousness she uncovers when she really attends to her attachments and lets go of the theoretical future that keeps her accumulating stuff. 

“There are no guarantees we’ll make it to breakfast,” writes Tina Lear. “It takes courage to see all that — to know that this is it, right here, and there’s nothing else. But when we do, then letting go … is not such a problem.” It becomes a practice.
Forward today's teachings to a friend »
Unclutter Your Life by Erasing Your Future
By Tina Lear

After revealing the possessions she refuses to let go of even when she knows she should (including old issues of Tricycle and herbal tinctures to get her community through an apocalypse— “It’s OK. You can laugh,” she says), writer Tina Lear reminds us to forget about a theoretical future and live fully now because “the world is ending all the time.” 
Read more »
Unstuff Your Life
By Andrew Mellen

Author and professional organizer Andrew Mellen helps us examine attachment and lays out a plan for clearing clutter and forming new habits.
Read more »
The Mindfulness of Tidying Up
By Shoukei Matsumoto 

An excerpt from the new book Work Like a Monk: A Buddhist Guide to Embracing What Matters reveals the importance of clean surroundings for settling our minds and nurturing awareness of interbeing.
Read more »
Follow Us
                    
Tricycle is a nonprofit and relies on your support to keep its wheels turning.
Copyright © 2026 Tricycle Foundation
All rights reserved.
89 5th Ave | New York, NY 10003

No comments:

Post a Comment