During the month of Elul and throughout the Days of Awe, our tradition recommends reading Psalm 27 twice each day. In this Psalm, David stirs us up to hope, courage, bold confidence in HaShem, and one other trait that is especially relevant for the High Holy Days, and for the middah of simplicity as well.
a "key" to success
some uncomplicated time
keeping it simple
simplicity gone too far
simple riches
a path to non-hoarding
like children
holiday simplicity
back to basics
necessary or not?
The REI catalogue arrived in the mail the other day and I discovered all kinds of things that I really needed, which I didn’t even know existed the day before. I got some relief after I sent the catalogue to the recycling bin, but later that day in a conversation with a friend I learned about several books that I absolutely had to read and a new movie I should definitely see while it was still in the local theaters.
questions to ask yourself
Use these questions to evaluate your day:
Is there an area in your life (home, routine, possessions) where you struggle with simplicity?
Do you have more than you need (food, home, possessions)? Why and how can you curb this?
Is there a way that you simplified your life today? Are you happier with the simplicity? Did it bring a sense of freedom?
Do you overcomplicate your life with excess? What is this excess? Sometimes the simplest solutions are like lighting a candle to remove darkness and chaos…what simple candle could you light to overcome your ‘darkness’?
Do you find it difficult to be because of all the stumbling blocks you set in your path? Do you have simple goals?
Do you have time-out moments where you can read a book or take a simple walk without technology?
Examine your home. What in your home helps you to exist and what bogs you down?