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Patreon Exclusive. Joshua and Ryan talk about expired careers, expired obligations, expired hometowns, and even expired relationships, and they answer the following questions:

Is there a value in placing expiration dates on everything in our lives? (00:00)

What does your acronym “TARA” represent? (07:33)

What are the three essential components of a relationship? (20:07)

How do I let go of a relationship of thirty years? (21:21)

How do we determine when it’s the appropriate time to switch careers? (30:24)

How do you find a new hometown when your original hometown no longer serves you? (36:58)

How do we determine when we should let a belief go? (41:13)

What does “moral” mean to you? (45:58)

How do we determine if we should minimize an activity that provides immense joy but obsesses us? (48:01)

How do you fulfill your obligations and responsibilities on days when you’re not feeling it? (50:46)


Do you discuss things differently when you’re alone compared to on the podcast? (55:08)

How have you managed to keep The Minimalists going for so long? (1:01:25)

LINKS

Added Value: “Follow Me Around”

Book: Crossroads

Book: Love People, Use Things

Essay: The Boundaries of Discontent

Instagram: Mallory French

Instagram: Emma Krebs

Instagram: Jordan Moore

Instagram: Podcast Shawn

Instagram: Jessica Williams

Instagram: Danny Unknwn

Podcast: How to Love

Podcast: Luxury Items

Podcast: Paycheck to Purpose

Podcast: The Curious One Podcast

Resources: The Minimalists

Subscribe: The Minimalists

Text: 937-202-4654

Tour: The Minimalists

Website: Beaulah

MAXIMS

“Less content, more contentment.” —Joshua Fields Millburn

“Doing less is not about the doing—it’s about the less.” —Joshua Fields Millburn

“Clinging corrupts contentment.” —Ryan Nicodemus

“Worrying is just praying for something bad to happen in the future.” —Joshua Fields Millburn

“The past does not equal the future.” —Joshua Fields Millburn

“Whatever you pick up, hold it loosely.” —Joshua Fields Millburn

“Beliefs often cloud the truth.” —Joshua Fields Millburn

This Maximal episode corresponds with Minimal episode 315.

Files

Private Podcast | "The Expiration Date on Friendships"

Joshua and Ryan talk about expired careers, expired obligations, expired hometowns, and even expired relationships, and they answer the following questions: 00:00 Is there a value in placing expiration dates on everything in our lives? 07:33 What does your acronym “TARA” represent? 20:07 What are the three essential components of a relationship? 21:21 How do I let go of a relationship of thirty years? 30:24 How do we determine when it’s the appropriate time to switch careers? 36:58 How do you find a new hometown when your original hometown no longer serves you? 41:13 How do we determine when we should let a belief go? 45:58 What does “moral” mean to you? 48:01 How do we determine if we should minimize an activity that provides immense joy but obsesses us? 50:46 How do you fulfill your obligations and responsibilities on days when you’re not feeling it? 55:08 ​Do you discuss things differently when you’re alone compared to on the podcast? 1:01:25 How have you managed to keep The Minimalists going for so long?

Comments

Ricardo C Pinzon Jr

(1) What some may see as "email clutter", others might see as continuing encouragement. (2) Great episode! I like to take notes as I listen. Relationships with people, jobs, things, all have expiration dates at their current level as was stated. My friendships from 20 years ago are different now. My relationship with my books have changed. Even my relationship with my wife has changed. Change is inevitable. (3) As I continue to listen to your podcasts, it has become clearer to me that as one gets older, priorities change. An easier, more relaxed lifestyle is what many want, yet still do not know how to get there. Minimalism can help. It may not manidest as an immediate result, but over time, it does. Thanks again!

Emma

Yes, Minimalism is like a horizon--you never get there. There's always a new horizon. All of them are beautiful. Thanks for the feedback, Ricardo!

Lorien Altadonna

I can’t always get to this immediately and really enjoy watching or listening later. But I’ll understand if you don’t want to keep it around.