How making less decisions can make you skinny

assorted sliced citrus fruits on brown wooden chopping board

The economics of daily life are shifting. For better or for worse depending on who you ask. Most would say the latter. But we have one rebuttal that might just save you.

Individuality will get you farther than a college degree these days. Not because the degree doesn't matter, but because everything runs on vibes now. Creativity is its own currency. Your product is the environment you exist in. The one you build over time, the place that sees you for exactly who you are.

Good atmosphere takes a lot of moving parts. But here's the thing, it tends to curate itself once it gets familiar with you. That's why you can tell a lot about a person by the state of their home. Your space is a direct reflection of your inner self. Clean that up and watch what follows.

Now. How does any of this make you skinny?

Glad you asked.

It's a butterfly effect situation you see. Your environment should cover the basics first. Comfort levels are up, water within reach, somewhere to think. Beyond that is where it gets interesting. A space that works for you becomes a space where you can sort through the mess in your head, make fewer decisions on autopilot, and redirect that saved energy towards things that actually matter.

Also, when we say skinny we mean the mindset. What your body looks like is frankly none of our business. Skinny is that feeling of being light. Productive without being frantic. Clear without trying too hard.

"Less is more" works especially well here. Remove the clutter. Redirect your life force into what actually gives you something back.

And if you don't know what that is yet, that's fine too. Relaxing is genuinely underrated. Sometimes the most productive thing you can do is nothing in particular. No second guessing, no performing. No exhausting yourself to keep up an image.

New beginnings can happen whenever, wether we plan for them or not. but sometimes our biggest priority is to keep the soil loamy so theres a solid foundation for the plants to grow.


— the editors