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QuixoticgeekQ

quixoticgeek@social.v.st

@quixoticgeek@social.v.st
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Recent Best Controversial

  • On a related note to last night's little thread about minimalism.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    Now we could all just go and rent one every time we need to put a shelf up, but the time and energy of going to a shop (often by car) is not a good use of resources. But neither is the number of power drills taking up space and doing nothing. In this situation a community level "library of things" is the ideal way to do this. Instead of most apartment residents owning a shitty consumer grade power drill. The community could have one quality unit that anyone in the building can borrow.
    2/n

    Uncategorized

  • On a related note to last night's little thread about minimalism.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    On a related note to last night's little thread about minimalism. One thing that I feel is not properly considered in all of this is community. If you have an apartment building with 50 apartments, it seems madness for a majority of them to have a power drill for small DIY tasks like putting up a shelf. If you think about it, a typical power drill in a non professional context may never see more than an hour's total run time in its life. That's a crazy low utilisation level.

    1/n

    Uncategorized

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    I said at the start of this thread I'd also talk about Minimalism the architecture movement. But as this thread is already 13 posts long, and I'm getting cold sat here sipping a beer and writing the thread. I'm gonna do a separate thread in the next few days on Minimalist architecture and the built environment.

    13/13

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    So what does this mean for most of us? Don't feel bad that you have stuff. For almost everyone reading this, you're not a hoarder. You just have possessions. And chances are they just aren't store well. Rather than binning stuff, you are probably better off looking at ways to better organise them. Investing some time and effort into some storage crates or organisation items is likely to be far more beneficial to you than throwing stuff out that you may later regret.

    12/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    They had even got rid of their winter clothing for the summer, because of the privilege of being able to buy more come the next winter. That's not only incredibly privileged, but it's the complete antithesis of the anti consumer idea that minimalism original espoused. Imagine if everyone threw out their Christmas decorations every January and bought them again in December... The amount of waste. Yikes. It hurts just thinking about it.
    11/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    The YouTube channel "exploring alternatives" had a video a few years ago about "extreme minimalism" and specifically some guy who had only 47 possessions. It's a cool idea. Pair your life down to the absolute bare minimum. Even down to not having a home. Instead relying on borrowing places from others. As if that shouldn't be a giant red flag of privilege right there (no a red flag wasn't one of the 47 items). This is an incredibly extreme form of minimalism. And it's utterly unsustainable.
    10/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    And it's not like that minimalism comes cheap. There's a white sofa that's popular with certain types of celebrities that costs upwards of $500,000. That's not a typo. No I'm not using some weird continental comma as a decimal point thing. The whole aesthetic is flaunting wealth in an aspirational way. It real bugs me.

    At the other end of the scale tho there the extreme minimalists who divest themselves of all their possessions. Down to the "bare essentials". And wow is that privileged.
    9/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    The home you live in says a lot about who you are. Your personality, your hobbies, your interests. Whether it's the climbing gear hanging in the hallway, or the hiking maps of the Pyrenees on the dining table, or the fantasy books on the shelf. It's part of who you are. All a white carpet and white sofa and absent shelves and empty walls tells us is? Is what exactly? You really like cleaning or can pay someone to clean for you ? I don't get it.
    8/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    I'm not sure how, but a while back I fell down a YouTube rabbit hole of interior design videos. Around the time when the minimalism aesthetic was quite prominent. Watching those videos I felt cold. There was something about the houses featured in those videos, & I say house and not home intentionally, it just felt. Cold. Unwelcoming. Impersonal. Unloved. It made me wonder about the people who live there. What is their personality? Do they have any hobbies? Are they just their job & netflix?
    7/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    I have friends who went for the decluttering thing, with a big clear out and getting rid of possessions. And now a few years later, they are trying to buy back some of the books they got rid of. Fortunately they are financially able to do this. But it's not an enjoyable process. I hate to watch it, but there's nothing I can do. At the time or now.

    So how does this fit in with minimalism the aesthetic?
    6/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    Now, I'm sure to get a small pileon from people telling me that there's a difference between having stuff, and hoarding. And they are right. Kinda.

    Severe enough Hoarding can be a psychological condition, often with causes rooted in trauma responses. The thing is, for almost everyone reading this thread. That is not you. Having a lot of stuff is not the same as hoarding and should not be treated the same. Starting with, don't feel bad for having possessions. (Sorry Marx).
    5/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    If you do need it again you're in a financial position to require it. Yes I could probably throw away that 300mm off cut of wood left over from a project. But if I need a small piece of wood in future (quite likely), I'll have to buy a full length. Etc... I have a pile of "useful" packaging boxes sat on top of a cabinet. I could throw it all out, none of it cost me money. But if I need to post something, I'm going to need to spend money, and time to buy something. So the pile of boxes exists
    4/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    Does this item bring you joy? Was a tool she used when helping people organise their stuff. Yeah, turns out that question doesn't work when it comes to the electricity bill...

    In a way this is tied to the fashion for minimalism as an aesthetic. Remember all those pictures of white homes with white furniture and very few personal possessions? The problem is in order to be able to throw something away you need to be either absolutely sure that you will never need it again. *OR* ...
    3/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    For starters. Note there's a difference between minimalism, and Minimalism. Not to mention that Minimalism movements in various arts (music, art, literature etc...). For the sake of this thread. I'm going to be concentrating on minimalism the aesthetic, and Minimalism the architecture. Oh and don't to be confusing Minimalism and Brutalism. They are not the same.

    Decluttering really rose to prominence with Marie Kondo and her netflix series.

    2/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    Inspired by one of the questions in this week's #MakersHour. We need to talk about decluttering and minimalism. Cos it's really pissing me off how utterly oblivious to their privilege those who push these are. Not to mention some of the issues relating to the way Minimalism has entered our built environment.

    Thread time.

    (This thread is not aimed at the lovely people of makersHour. Please be nice to them).

    1/n

    Uncategorized makershour

  • Imagine if before every journey you had to give 48 hours notice to do it.
    QuixoticgeekQ Quixoticgeek

    Imagine if before every journey you had to give 48 hours notice to do it. That's the reality for disabled people across many countries. Wanna take a train? Gotta book the assistance 24-48 hours in advance. Relative gone into hospital and you need to go see them? Tough, should have planned in advance.

    This is why I am so vocal about level access trains and working lifts. If we design accessibility into our infrastructure, it becomes more useful to more people.

    https://cupoftea.social/@moof/115156406075288236

    Uncategorized
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