I once stayed the night with my friend Paul in Brixton (in his house, not in the prison). It was some years ago when he and I were both training on the Southwark diocese ordination course — the one set up by John Robinson, who wrote the wonderful book about John's gospel, The Priority of John. If you have never read it and you come across it for sale — an aged priest's effects being tossed out after his death, or on Abe Books or somewhere — grab a copy; it's worthwhile.
So there we were because Paul had kindly said he'd take me dancing in Heaven (which he did). When I discovered in the course of our college sessions that there was a place in London called Heaven where you could go dancing, I absolutely wanted to go. heaven, it turned out, was a very dark nightclub under the arches near to Charing Cross station. But it was the idea I loved — dancing in Heaven. So we did that until the small hours one summer night and then went back to Paul's place.
He had the window open because it was July and very hot, and he went to sleep but I had so many thoughts filling my head and I needed to process them first. So I guess we laid down to sleep around three, and because of the time of year the dawn was about four.
Near Paul's place in Brixton, under the auspices of Lambeth Council, there is Brockwell Park. In the morning when Paul surfaced from sleep, we went for a a walk there. He wanted to show me the rose gardens, where you could sit on a bench, surrounded not only by roses but also by flocks of sparrows, confident and unafraid. This was a cheering sight because for a while in the UK the sparrow population declined significantly, and to see so many of them made me happy.
But the sparrows were evident not only in Brockwell Park in the morning, but during the preceding night, outside Paul's open bedroom window.
Sitting on the wall that surrounded the small yard, all through the night someone was saying: "Cheep. Cheep. Cheep. Cheep. Cheep. Cheep. Cheep." Occasionally varied by: "Cheep!"
Reading blogs and watching YouTube videos on the topic of minimalism, as I often do, I am sometimes reminded of that night and that bird.
Some minimalists see minimalism through an aesthetic lens, primarily focusing on home décor and their chic wardrobe full of thoughtful acquired good-quality pieces; some consider it in terms of survival (how small a Tokyo flat it is possible to live in, how to make a car your primary residence); others see it in terms of productivity, applying models like Greg McKeown's Essentialism to their business practice and life organisation; some, like the one-bag nomadic minimalists, are mainly interested in freedom. There are all sorts of good reasons to be a minimalist.
But within the ranks of minimalists there exists a subset of (mainly) women whose focus is on frugality. They have discovered that if you have less, eat out less, buy less, and cook with fewer ingredients, Why then, you spend less money.
Today I watched a minimalist YouTuber, a thin, meek looking woman with a gentle voice, having showed us her rack of half a dozen garments, allow us to run our eye along her kitchen shelf bearing oats, rice, beans and er... well, that was about it. We watched as she tipped some rolled oats from the jar into her saucepan on the stove in the supremely tidy and uncluttered kitchen, and then added quite a lot of tap water, and a very small spoonful of what I suppose was brown sugar. I cannot tell you what she did next because at that point I wandered off.
But what occupied her attention for the most part was how much things cost. Her food was definitely budget range (the sort that may not make you live longer but will certainly make you feel as if you had), and her clothes were made of hardwearing materials so she could get the most wear out of them. Her couch was covered with one worn out sheet on top of another, so the holes were in different places as they fulfilled their duty of protecting the couch from dirt. And her hobbies were chosen to minimise financial outlay.
All good stuff and I have no doubt I could learn a lot form her — damn it, I've just paid a man £250 to cut back our hedge!
But even so, she brought back to my mind that sparrow, singing its rather limited song all through the summer night in Brixton twenty-five years ago.
I am all for minimalism, always in principle and on-and-off in practice because I do like to enjoy life, but I think "appropriate" is a better word than "cheap". And of course minimalism has the advantage of giving you greater freedom to choose what you consider appropriate. If you live simply and quietly for the most part, then you can afford to pay a man £250 to cut the hedge.
One of my daughters, who is so skilled at minimalism she could write her own blog about it, has for some years lived in a shed. It costs about half as much as living in a flat. But look, she's a grown-up woman, she's just turned forty, she has a full-time job and is training to be a psycho-synthesis counsellor in her spare time; she gets tired. Living in a flat is hard work. She can do it, yes, but is it appropriate at this stage in her life? It makes me — I who am all for minimalism in all its forms — feel very happy and content that she has decided to upgrade her accommodation to something with its own proper bathroom and kitchen and washing machine. This, to my mind, is a hallelujah level of appropriate. And it's because of the skilled practice of minimalism that she can have it.
And talking about hedges (which you may have noticed were occasionally mentioned in these musings) has brought back to my mind a glorious conversation once relayed to me by Bernard, to whom I was briefly and happily married a couple of decades ago.
He told me about his cousin who had been working in the garden, mowing the lawn and trimming the hedges while his wife cooked their lunch. You are no doubt aware that mowing a lawn is incomplete until you have also trimmed the edges with a tool of this sort.
And when lunch was ready and his wife went out to admire the results of his labour (because, can a tree really fall in the forest if there is no woman to admire the work of the man who cut it down?) their conversation went like this:
He: "I've finished."
She: "No you 'aven't. You 'aven't trimmed the edges."
He: "I 'ave trimmed the 'edges!"
She: "You 'aven't! Look! You 'aven't done the edges."
He: "I 'ave done the 'edges!"
She: "No you 'aven't! Look!
He: "What? Oh — the edges! No, I 'aven't trimmed the edges yet — I'll do that after lunch.
May your day be blessed, your communication successful, your lunch be delicious, your aitches be clearly sounded, and all your choices be entirely appropriate.