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Glossary›Simple Living

Glossary

Simple Living

A lifestyle philosophy emphasizing material moderation, mindful consumption, and the pursuit of meaning beyond possessions—an ancient ideal practiced across cultures and spiritual traditions.

What is Simple Living?

Simple living refers to practices that promote simplicity in one’s lifestyle, including reducing possessions, depending less on technology and services, and spending less money, while also reflecting a person’s mindset and values. The philosophy rejects high-consumption, materialistic lifestyles of consumer cultures and affirms that very little is needed to live well—that abundance is a state of mind, not a quantity of consumer products. Unlike poverty, which is involuntary and debilitating, simple living is a conscious choice made to prioritize spiritual growth, relationships, ecological responsibility, and personal freedom over material accumulation.

Origins & Lineage

Epicureanism, based on the teachings of the Athens-based philosopher Epicurus, flourished from about the fourth century BCE to the third century CE and held that the paradigm of happiness was the untroubled life, made possible by carefully considered choices; Epicurus pointed out that troubles entailed by maintaining an extravagant lifestyle tend to outweigh the pleasures of partaking in it. During the classical period, there were many types of simplicity, including the affluent temperance of the Stoics—Cicero, Seneca, and Marcus Aurelius, the more modest ‘golden mean’ of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, the ascetic primitivism of Diogenes, and the pastoral simplicity of Virgil and Horace.

Gautama Buddha espoused simple living as a central virtue of Buddhism, with the Four Noble Truths advocating detachment from desire as the path to ending suffering and attaining Nirvana. Jesus is said to have lived a simple life and encouraged his disciples “to take nothing for their journey except a staff—no bread, no bag, no money in their belts—but to wear sandals and not put on two tunics.” Many other notable religious individuals, such as Benedict of Nursia, Francis of Assisi, Leo Tolstoy, Rabindranath Tagore, Albert Schweitzer, and Mahatma Gandhi, have claimed that spiritual inspiration led them to simple living.

Henry David Thoreau, an American naturalist and author, made the classic secular advocacy of a life of simple and sustainable living in his book Walden (1854), where he conducted a two-year experiment living a plain and simple life on the shores of Walden Pond. The 20th century saw the formalization of “Voluntary Simplicity” by Richard Gregg, a student of Gandhi, and its popularization in the West by Duane Elgin in 1981, positioning it as a lifestyle that is “outwardly simple, inwardly rich.”

How It’s Practiced

Simple living manifests differently across individuals and cultures. Adherents may choose simple living for a variety of personal reasons, such as spirituality, health, increase in quality time for family and friends, work–life balance, personal taste, financial sustainability, increase in philanthropy, frugality, environmental sustainability, or reducing stress.

According to the philosophy, personal and social progress is measured not by the conspicuous display of wealth or status, but by increases in the qualitative richness of daily living, the cultivation of relationships, and the development of social, intellectual, aesthetic, and spiritual potentials; it is “a manner of living that is outwardly simple and inwardly rich, a deliberate choice to live with less in the belief that more life will be returned to us in the process.”

Practitioners commonly reduce material possessions to essentials, grow food when possible, limit dependence on consumer goods, choose experiences over acquisitions, work less or more meaningfully, cultivate mindfulness, and embrace frugality not as deprivation but as liberation. Thoreau’s approach involved building a modest cabin, growing his own food, writing in his journal, and sauntering through the woods, observing nature in a state of prolonged fascination.

Simple Living Today

Magazines such as Real Simple call to us from supermarket checkouts; Oprah Winfrey regularly interviews fans of simple living such as Jack Kornfield, a teacher of Buddhist mindfulness; the Slow Movement, which advocates a return to pre-industrial basics, attracts followers across continents. Contemporary seekers encounter simple living through decluttering workshops, voluntary simplicity discussion groups, minimalist blogs, homesteading communities, tiny house movements, and retreats focused on mindful consumption.

The philosophy may be changing under the influence of economics and environmentalism; when recession strikes, millions suddenly find frugality becomes a necessity again, and the value of its associated virtues is rediscovered. Climate concerns, income inequality, and digital overwhelm have renewed interest in lives of reduced consumption and increased presence.

Books like Duane Elgin’s Voluntary Simplicity (1981), journals such as Simple Living Magazine, and online communities offer guidance. The approach spans urban professionals reducing work hours to homesteaders living off-grid, united by the desire to align daily life with deeper values.

Common Misconceptions

Simple living is not synonymous with poverty, deprivation, or lack. Poverty is involuntary and debilitating, whereas simplicity is voluntary and enabling; poverty is mean and degrading to the human spirit, whereas a life of conscious simplicity can have both a beauty and a functional integrity that elevates the human spirit.

It is not necessarily a back-to-nature movement, though it may include that. Voluntary simplicity should not be equated with a back-to-nature movement; although an historic shift in net population migration towards small towns and rural places is underway, the large majority of people continue to reside in urban environments, and voluntary simplicity seems perhaps as compelling for this urban majority as it does for the rural minority.

Simple living is not identical to minimalism, though they overlap. Minimalism typically emphasizes reducing physical possessions and aesthetic restraint, while simple living is a broader philosophy encompassing relationships, work, values, time use, and connection to nature. One can live simply without adopting minimalist aesthetics.

Simple living can be advocated for a wide variety of reasons and represents no single philosophy of life. It is not a rigid dogma but an adaptable framework each person applies according to their circumstances and convictions.

How to Begin

Start with inquiry rather than action. Simplify the problem of life, distinguish the necessary and the real; probe the earth to see where your main roots run. Ask what truly matters to you and whether your current lifestyle reflects those priorities.

Read foundational texts: Thoreau’s Walden (1854) remains the classic secular statement on simple living. Walden gives an account of his two year stay and is, without any doubt, the greatest statement ever made on the living strategy now variously known as ‘voluntary simplicity,’ ‘simple living,’ or ‘downshifting.’ Duane Elgin’s Voluntary Simplicity (1981) offers a modern framework. Jerome Brillaud’s A Philosophy of Simple Living (2020) provides historical and philosophical context.

Begin with small experiments: spend a month tracking where your time and money actually go. Try a media fast, a buying freeze, or a gratitude practice. Declutter one room without replacing what you remove. Cook a meal from scratch. Take a walk without your phone. Notice what you miss and what you don’t.

Seek community through discussion groups, intentional communities, or online forums like the Simplicity Collective. Recognize that simple living is not a destination but a continuous practice of aligning outer life with inner values.

Related terms

voluntary simplicityminimalismmindful consumptionintentional livingslow livingdegrowth
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