The Winchester Mindset

I saw this online a couple of days ago and stole it because it's great. Until we all think like this, we still have a lot of work to do:

Hmmm... maybe I could work with some artists and see if we can come up with some shirts that rock on this concept... something that we can do some good with. It's always worth a shot.


This full blown minimalist mindset I've gotten myself into is wonderful. There's a peculiar chain of events attached to such a thing which is probably a huge lie but one that's working for me on some level of my psyche I won't pretend to understand...

The more things I get out of the house, out of my life and out of sight, the more room there appears to be for me to get along with my work.

Maybe a human being is nothing but a jar to be filled with a certain amount of sand? 

I'd like to think that was true but real world examples such as Mr. Trump having more money than Greece vs the guy I once saw die in the street with nothing but a pair of old pants and a brown shirt that all the buttons had fallen off, say otherwise. I guess the truth of the matter is that we all make things up to get us through the night. We will believe anything we tell ourselves. That's the absolute truth of the matter - and when I describe myself as a Dirty Realism writer, that's what I'm really getting at... looking for the truth by throwing words together and hoping one day I'll turn over the stone I was looking for. 

(Shoot... I've forgotten what I was going to write about now...)

Oh yeah, the less I have around, the more I seem to be able to achieve. For instance, now I have given away every single book I owned on music writing (aside from No One Here Gets Out Alive) I feel free enough to press on with another music book in the shape of Howl... for some reason, I would sit and look at my shelves and think "I'll never write a book as good as Ziggyology" and some trap door in there would open up and make it so.

Thus, by killing the demons in plain sight, freedom has decided to reveal itself.

I'm not unique in this. It's nothing but my own peculiar prison I made for myself, but don't kid yourself that you don't have one of your own.

Maybe it's also why writers, musicians, film-makers et al, produce their best work when they're young... or rather, when they have nothing. You have to fill the void-jar with something and at that point in your life, the best way to do it is by yourself rather than with somebody else's stuff.

Then again, I could just be full of shit but it seems to be working out for me so I'm taking it as a win and will go to bed convinced there is some kind of valuable wisdom in this.


While I remember - because it's important - one of my favourite writers who comes in the shape of a man called Poe Ballantine, recently posted up a short film called Poe In Hot Springs. Watch it - it's linked up there.

It's very cool and is just the kind of thing writers should be doing with their time to enhance their writing legacy instead of begging for cash like cheap dime-store hoods over at patreon.com.

I don't know if they still have dime-stores over in the U.S. but it's as good a phrase as I can think of right now.


Finally, there's a new album out from Steve Wilson this week. It's called To The Bone and it's an album I needed to hear to reinstate my faith that there were people still out there capable of making that very special thing called an 'album' without running out of ideas towards the end - or even worse, towards the middle.

Whilst mostly being a challenging listen (in all the right ways) as the man behind Porcupine Tree, Wilson is also more than capable of reducing a man to tears in the simplest of ways. Take a look at this:

I think my work here is done for the day. It might be one in the morning but that's no reason not to sit on this suitable chair for an hour or so and kick up some dust with a new toy:

Show Me How To Live...

The purge continues. Little by little, it continues in the right direction. Yesterday, (not so) small person (anymore) asked me why I was giving all my books away when - aside from my record player, a few albums and my guitars - it was almost all I had left. It was a question that deserved an even better answer.

I sealed her mouth shut by giving her my record player (hey, in for a penny and all that) and a few albums she might actually like. She took to it well, fell in love with the concept and this morning, disappeared to an inner city nightmare in search of her first slab of vinyl she could call her own… and came back with a Michael Jackson album. 

It could have been worse and I’m good with that, though it would have been neat if she had discovered Mother Love Bone all by herself. 

Anyway, I chewed her question over and I guess the real answer is that many years ago when I left home, I had very little to call my own - but a year or so later, when I left town to head for London, I had even less. A few clothes in a bag, a copy of an Ed McBain novel (See Them Die) I was dipping in and out of, a Walkman and two cassettes. One featured Rick Springfield’s Living In Oz with New Jersey from Bon Jovi on the other side and tape two had The Doors Morrison Hotel and Zodiac Mindwarp’s Tattooed Beat Messiah

What more could a man possibly need on a shamanic quest to find himself?

I can’t recall ever feeling more like anything was possible than I did back then when I had nothing - and while this isn’t an attempt to reduce myself to the meagre possessions of Gandhi - it is certainly an attempt to get down to what’s either useful or beautiful… and the one thing I’ve discovered already is that very little truly belongs in either category. 

Thus, my codex for the future is going to be something like:

Tread softly and leave a big fucking scar in the wind

...which I think is harsh enough not to be called a tree-hugging hippie. Hugging things ain't gonna fix jack. What the world needs is a warrior and warriors don't carry backpacks full of crap around with them. 

Ummm... that might be taking it a little too far but the sentiment is there. 

The wisdom of samurai is priceless. 


As a footnote to this on the subject of music, I've done my time with vinyl. I have no regrets about handing the magic of it down a generation. I've spent more money on vinyl than I ever did on books for years on end. I've tried to resurrect what I felt for it but in the real world, jacking my iPhone into Creature Speakers has more power behind it than any record deck I've ever owned... 

...and if MP3 is the worst format in the world, that's OK because my ears are so hammered after all those years, I honestly can't tell the difference any more. 

The Minimalism Of Minimalism

I figured I’d best write the next instalment of my series on minimalism - and then I stopped… what am I? A fucking babysitter for people who can’t control their own impulses? A nu-age internet guru dishing out handy tips for people too busy to figure out how to live a life that's worth something?

No. That’s not what I built this place for and I have things to do, so:

Get rid of your shit: If you didn’t own it already, how much would you pay to have it in your life? There’s your answer to most of your problems.

Traveling light: If you want to take all your stuff around the world with you like a soon to be evicted hermit crab, knock yourself out. What the hell do I care. See you by the pool sucker. 

Soul Ache: If you care more about inanimate objects than you do about people, your soul has gone the same way as Elvis - straight out of the stage door in search of a burger with fries. Don’t forget the cheese while you're looking for it.

My Advice: Once you stop worrying what others think about you, you’ll realise how little they do.

I don't think I left anything out.

Taken from The Unwritten. An even better graphic novel series than Sandman.

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The Art Of Minimalism (2)

Minimalism On The Road

One of the best aspects of having a minimalist mindset is how it can sometimes challenge you in ways you never imagined - and there's nothing quite like being away from home to force you to think about what you really need in your life. 

Inside my head, I knew it was possible to go away for a few days and take only what would fit in my pockets - minimalism in the extreme if you will - but actually committing to it was a whole different ballgame.

The first thing to realise is, unless you're going to Borneo (or similar), most countries have these little buildings - sometimes big buildings - called shops. There's a whole wealth of goodies that can be found in there. Toothpaste, shampoo, toothbrushes - you name it, they probably stock it. It really is amazing. 

Seriously, why pack a bag full of security nightmares when you could simply buy it when you get where you're going and ditch it before you come home? So far, this train of thought has not let me down - and believe me, I understand how hair can be a difficult beast more than most, but I've never fallen down a manhole by doing this. I'm not talking medicines and very specific personal items but people really are catered for in other countries as well as we are here. It might be stating the obvious, but you would be surprised at how the idea of this fills some people with disgust at being parted from what they're comfortable with.

It's a big thing out of the way when you don't have to think about that little bag of stuff though.

Clothes can be a pig of a thing to figure out but after a few trial runs, I finally mastered it. When I first went out into the world with nothing, I was in Milan for four days during November (just to give you an idea of what I was up against). One pair of jeans is enough. It really is. Unless you're one of those people who can't keep their food in their mouth or can't resist climbing over rusty fences into muddy cemetaries, it's enough.

One pair of shoes/boots is also enough. Maybe it depends what kind of a trip you're on. If it's business and changes of clothes are important to achieve said business, a bag may be totally necessary, but for wandering around pretending to be lost, no.

T-shirt, shirt, leather jacket. That's the top half. On arrival, t-shirt comes off, shirt back on. If it needs washing for aforementioned food crimes, wash it. Better still - ditch it. Those shops I mentioned, they also sell things like that too. The idea is not to be uncomfortable or dirty - the idea is freedom and if you get a new t-shirt into the bargain, great. So far as I can tell, one black t-shirt bought at home is pretty much the same as a black t-shirt bought away.

I thought the bottom half would be a little more problematic but it's not really. Socks and pants can also be found in our new favourite place. Buy new stuff - ditch the old - then you get to go home with windswept and interesting smalls. 

I had built this up to be a big deal before I actually went for it, but going out to find toothpaste and socks is also a good chance to scout the area around wherever you're staying. You get good at it. It doesn't take longer than half an hour but it was only the half hour you would have spent standing around at the luggage carousel - and it's not the end of the world if you decide to do it later either. 

It's called freedom.

It's worth pointing out here that the jacket is a key part of this kit. Leather is fantastic. It's warm when it needs to be and won't kill you to death when it's hot. The jacket I have has a whole bunch of pockets but you'd look a fool if you stuffed them with clothes, so keep it essential and flat. I also found a great pair of jeans from Crosshatch with pockets coming out of their ears. Not a ridiculous amount - I do have dignity - but enough to be helpful. You simply need to figure out a way to make what you do take with you work like a Shire Horse.

So my bare essentials list looked like this:

1. Passport - you can't get out of this one

2. iPhone, earbuds, charger cable and plug - sometimes, technology rocks

3. A book - that I left in the room when it was finished, but the habit of reading an ebook on your phone is likely a good skill to foster

4. Cash - another one you can't get out of unless you live by The Card

Pretty slimmed down if I say so myself.  

For longer trips, it's still possible to travel light as a feather. Back when I had a week in the mountains of Colorado on the horizon, I figured I might have to take more. This is when I was inexperienced but I still got away with a couple of shirts and a change of underwear - but even in the wilderness of America, you can find both things at the airport on the other side and even locally.

Who knew people who live in the wilderness also need pants and shirts! 

But take a bag I did. My trusted Overlander from Scaramanga - the only bag I own (and ever will):

I can't even recall what was in it now. I probably used the clothes I had packed and frivolously took a couple of books and a notebook too - all of which have since been ditched for reading and working digitally on the phone - unless I have a book I really want to finish. What's the point in having the equivalent of a small computer in your pocket if you're not going to push it to the max when you want to travel light?

Digitally speaking, there are worse things to do than take photos of your passport and stash them securely on the cloud... and I can't remember the last time I printed off a boarding pass or checked in at the airport. A smartphone can really be your best friend out in the world. If you lose it, you're screwed but then, if you lost your passport and cash, you'd be screwed too. With minimalism, it's not like you have to look after much while you're away, so look after this.

If you need something to keep money and cards in, I use this Bellroy Card Sleeve. Two cards, driving licence and a fistful of folded notes and it's still flatter than four Dairylea cheese slices stacked on top of each other. A genius piece of material engineering if ever I saw one:

(Maybe I should add this to my list of possessions from the previous post. Hmm.)

I don't think I left anything important out. Honestly, if you're going to take everything you have at home with you, what's the point in going anywhere? Get with the programme and see where it takes you.

Next: Minimalism In The Head

•••

“Stuff your eyes with wonder, live as if you’d drop dead in ten seconds. See the world. It’s more fantastic than any dream made or paid for in factories.” – Ray Bradbury

The Art Of Minimalism (1)

To make a change around here (and to focus myself), I thought I'd create a series of articles on minimalism and why it works for me... and maybe how it can work for some of you too. I'm not going to get all evangelistical on your ass but you know... if you can eek something out of it that's worth a damn, something positive has been achieved don't you think?

There's lots of information out in the online world about minimalism - it appears to be A Thing at the moment - then again, since the internet got switched on, everything is A Thing, right?

Minimalism isn't something you can pick up and put down - it's a way of life. A way of life that, if you do it thoughtfully, affords you so much freedom in the world, you'll wonder what hit you and why you didn't shrug off the junk earlier.

Minimalism started burrowing its way into my head about 13 years ago - before it had a 'name'. Life was so busy with kids, a job, money grief (you get the picture), I simply needed to turn the volume down. I read an article about some guy who was desperately trying to get his possessions down to 100 things, or maybe it was 50 - either way, it seemed an awful lot of stuff... I didn't even own that much at the time. So I came up with an arbitrary number (which was 12) and went for it - not by starting at the bottom with what I didn't need or want in my life, but at the top with what I did want. Some of those were practical, some were necessities and some really did make me happy. I don't even recall what was on that list anymore - that's how much 'the stuff' meant, but fast forward to today and my list of twelve items is still pretty solid.

Based on one of the most useful quotes of all time: "Don't have anything in your life that's not useful or you don't find beautiful", in no particular order, it currently looks like this:

1. Hector

2. 12 string guitar

3. MacBook/iPhone - does this count as one or two things? I could probably live without one of them if I had to

4. Car - because there's no point in freedom if you can't go anywhere

5. A pen - it matters more than you think

6. A suit - because sometimes you just have to

7. An internet/digital radio - a gift that I use more than I thought I would

8. Record player - plus some carefully curated vinyl

9. Bike - mountain variety

10. A big wooden chest - this is not full to the brim but currently holds things like: a box of photographs from when I was a kid that I can't decide what to do with and notebooks I use for writing. It's a work in progress.

11. A sword - recreational purposes

12. A bag - for travelling from Scaramanga (more on this in the next post)

and maybe: 13. A Japanese Maple - not sure if this counts. I like to think I'm just looking after it for the world

I also own some great art. Not much but listing it all down here, I see I obviously have more than 12 things, so let me go count...

•••

There are three great pieces of art now I count them and I think I can live with myself over that. My sins are not so great if I hit fifteen items of value in the world.

•••

Anyway, as you'll see, this list doesn't include one towel, one fork, one plate - that would be ridiculous. I have a family, a dog, a job... (notably things I want in my life) and they don't necessarily share my point of view. I simply wanted to be free from being trapped in a weird consumer culture that I never asked to be part of. 

Time is precious - why spend it with people you don't want to or doing things you don't want to do? Best to spend it with the people you care about and on the stuff that's important... surely?

My downfall with minimalism is books. Despite a few purges over recent years, I still have far too many but I'm working on it. It's not something I wander around the house worrying about every day, but I know it needs doing - based mostly on the fact that I never read anything twice and therefore 99% of these books that surround me are thus rendered pointless. 

Are they even books if they're not being read? 

I'm going to figure this out by the end of the summer but my point here is to illustrate how easy it is to tie yourself to things. Maybe 'they show the world who I am' but that's an old version of me thinking. They don't really. Nobody comes round and nobody in the house ever marvels over my great collection of books, so who am I showing who I am to? The answer is probably myself, but like I said it's old thinking and it's hard to get out of.

I don't want to be defined by the things I bought. I want to be defined by what I do. 

On the plus side, knowing I'm lying to myself is priceless. 

But there's nothing in my list of possessions that doesn't contribute to either: doing what I want to do, participating in the things I love or taking care of the things I want to take care of. Basically, minimalism has allowed me to focus on the things that are important because I'm not distracted by the things that aren't.

The killing blow in all of this is that when you do it in the physical world, it echoes inside your head too. You get to be very good at habitually turning down the volume of the world when it gets too loud. I don't listen or watch the news (large scale events filter out regardless), I don't watch TV I don't want to watch just because it's on, I don't read a book to the end just because I started it if it's dull, I don't stay anywhere that doesn't inspire me... the list is long, but not endless - it's all achievable and the end result can be nothing less than a life lived on your own terms.

If you're game to throw in your all, give it a whirl. Make a list of the things you really want to keep around you and get the rest the hell out of your life. Then do it again... and again... and again until the exercise is painfully difficult on the grounds that there's not a lot left to make a list about.

Believe it or not, figuring out what to do with your possessions/junk is the easy part. 

Questions welcome. Answers available. Maybe.

I'll leave you with this. I think it says just about all there is to say.

Next: Minimalism On The Road.

•••

"It's one thing not to live your own life
but another entirely not to die your own death"

Little By Little...

I spent a couple of hours yesterday watching a Twisted Sister documentary on Vimeo. It’s the best £4 I’ve handed over in a long time. Great band and a great documentary too. You know already if you want to watch it, so let’s move on… oh wait, let me drop the movie poster in here because it makes me smile and takes me back to a more innocent time:


Yesterday was majorly productive. I put the latest issue of The Mag to bed around lunchtime so I can forget about that for a day or so - though I guess I had best start work on the next one pretty soon - and turned back to a radio show idea I’ve been working on since the death of my 'if you blinked, you missed it' podcasting idea of a few months back. Over the last few weeks I've been gathering tracks and rearranging them over and over in iTunes until I was happy I had enough material for six shows.

And now I do. With the assistance of GarageBand, I built the first show, ironed out some creases and generally created an environment in which I could pull the other shows together reasonably quickly. If you’ve never done anything like this yourself, you’ll be amazed at exactly how much time it chews up, so this was an important step. It’s probably incorrect in every way imaginable and I would hate to parade my methods in front of a producer, but hey - that sort of thing never stopped me before. Hell, I even got it together enough to find a platform it could be broadcast and syndicated from - that was no mean feat either.

I’m hoping to have a cache of shows ready to roll and grow into by the end of the month, which is about the time they’ll hopefully start broadcasting too. I’ll post an update when I know some more. It’s worth me mentioning here too that this show probably won’t feature what you’re expecting from me. Kind of, but not quite. No spoilers.


What else happened? Oh yeah… I was starting to think the book I had planned for late (very late) this year - Cities of the Dead - had fallen into a crevice it couldn’t climb out of but then, as if by magic, I got a request to head out to Warsaw. I’ve never been and am very, very much looking forward to it - that’s in four weeks time, so that will be here before I know it too. There’s work to do while I’m there, of course there is, but there will be holes in which I can investigate life for the book.

If you missed that post, Cities of the Dead is a collection of travel writing - my style. Its completion has always been dependent on getting around the planet to make it happen, so this is a big step in the right direction. I think that tips me just over half way with it.


Backtracking a little here - while I was hunting down the Twisted Sister movie, I saw a trailer for a movie called Minimalism. It’s made by the two guys who have made blogging, writing, podcasting, internet celebrity careers out of the subject. I like what they do a lot even though I think - considering they're the two best known minimalists in the western world - they still own far too much stuff. What kind of minimalist takes a hairdryer on a ten month road trip? It wasn’t even the guy who has the most hair that packed it… it was the other one... the one with something like three inches of hair! I’m not passing judgement, honestly I’m not, but really? A hairdryer? 

Anyway, Minimalism is about excluding the things in your life that are of no use to you. ‘Owning stuff’ is not ‘living your life’. That's a true and liberating fact. As I’ve pointed out before, when it comes to your precious belongings, when you die, some fucker will only come along and throw it all away now you're not looking.

I still find it a little odd that when people talk about minimalism, they bandy around figures like ‘150 things’ being a good goal to aim for. It’s not a good goal at all. It’s a lazy goal in every way imaginable. If you’re game for the actual commitment of minimalism, 50 things is a good first goal. If you can get down to 50 things you absolutely must have in your life, you can certainly get down to a fluctuating 20 over the next few months.

20 things that mean something to you. It can be done. We're not talking cutlery in the drawer, shampoo on a shelf or a toolbox under the sink. We all have lives to live and stuff to take care of - we're talking 50 items that add value to your life. Go. Go now and make room in your house, in your head and your life. It's incredibly liberating. When you've done 50, you can do 20 because you are not the accumulation of everything you have gathered around you.

You are a spirit and a soul - not a storage unit for the universe.

Everything else is just noise.

The movie looks great though. Here’s the poster for it:


Quote of the Day:

“Sometimes you wake up in the middle of the day. Sometimes you wake up in the middle of your life.”

<Yarrow Kraner>