This is part 4 of several posts discussing Richard Foster’s chapter on Simplicity in Celebration of Discipline.
Of the ten practical ways to embrace simplicity in your life that Richard Foster discusses in Celebration of Discipline, this next one has made me most uncomfortable. I must confess here: it has taken me several weeks to write about this one. Oh, I started it. Three weeks ago I started it…
Reject anything that is producing an addiction in you.
Foster is not talking about dangerous addictions here; he is talking about the generally good or fun things that people enjoy, that become obsessions or idols in our lives. Such as buying books, shoes, clothes, watching TV or other media, sports, games, Facebook, Blogging, Pinterest, or ________________(fill in the blank here.)
But please note that Mr. Foster says specifically, “learn to distinguish between what is a real psychological need, like cheerful surroundings, and an addiction.” That line made me smile — Right, we’re just making the cottage into a place with cheerful surroundings!

“My heart will be on books when my strength has failed.” –Carolyn Sherwin Bailey
But I spend a lot of time buying books. I’m a librarian. I buy books from Amazon, Half-Price Books, Powell’s, Abe Books, Barnes and Noble (I’m still in mourning for Borders…) Westminster Book Store, Christian Book Distributors and others. I buy them for work, and I buy them (ahem) for myself…Is it a real psychological need? Yes — for study, for serious reading, for reference; I don’t buy fluff. Well, not much.
And the other thing is — I like owning books. I like the way they feel in my hands. I love opening new books and reading the dust jacket. I enjoy the art on the dust jacket — if you ask me Nooks and Kindles can’t compete. But that’s another post…
And I do give them away. If I loan a book, I generally loan it with the expectation that I won’t get it back. (Unless my name is on the flyleaf; then there are no excuses, right?) I’m glad to give away books I love. And sometimes I buy myself another copy…

My nightstand is proof that I don’t need to buy myself another copy — I have plenty to read. And this is just one nightstand; I have another that looks just like this one at the cottage. (This feels like True Confession time…)
It’s interesting because that’s what Foster recommends — give away the stuff that you love to prove it has no hold over you. He tells a funny story about a young man who was so addicted to his morning newspaper that when it didn’t come one morning, he found himself plotting how to steal his neighbor’s paper. Horrified, he immediately called the newspaper to cancel his subscription. Cold turkey on newspapers! Not because newspapers are bad, but because he didn’t want to be obsessed.
And another suggestion for simple living that goes right along with this one is this: Learn to enjoy things without owning them.
Could I get my books without buying them? Yes. I’m a librarian, for goodness sake! Amazon just makes it so easy…
Support your local library instead of Amazon. Rent a vacation house instead of buying one. Go to museums. Window shop. Rent tools. Lease a car, or better yet, take public transportation if you can. Celebrate public parks. Do free stuff. Steal share your neighbor’s newspaper (with their permission, of course.)
So, some of my books are going to have to go…One of the rooms I love in my city house is the library. Built-in bookshelves all along a wall — such a luxury — and we don’t have the space at the cottage. Though Mr. H.C. has offered to build me a wall of bookshelves in the living room… But boxes of books are so heavy. Should I give away the ones I’m saving to read some day; or my favorites that I’m saving to read again? Hmmm…
Is there something you need to be careful about buying because you buy too much? Is there something that you need to be careful about doing because you do it too much?
My newspaper had better be outside in the morning! I too have coveted my neighbor’s copy innocently lying there. It is one of the difficult things to give up when traveling, even though you can get the news online. I depend on your recommendation for books to read …..
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“When good things become ultimate things . . . ” . I would add to your library “Counterfeit Gods” by Tim Keller. Most definitely a wall of books in your living room – adds character and interest – way better than a tv wall :)
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Yes, I bought that one for the church library but put it out immediately when it was new, and never took it back out again to read myself. Anything he writes is tremendous!
Can I borrow it from you?? :-)
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Nancy, I hope you’re reading something good on the beach. I also hope it’s warmer there than it is here!!!
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I think books are an exception to this rule. For thousands of years, people have accumulated books. Books hold knowledge and magic. If you had too many pairs of boots, now…
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Nope — just two pairs of boots. :-)
I agree with you though, about books. (That’s why I have so many!) I’ve just not counted them as a problem until I realized, “Oh, some day we will have to move these…”
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It is a pain to move books. After 8 years we still have a few stray unpacked book boxes. Hmmm. I have sorted through my closet though. That was a good feeling. :)
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Good for you! Clothes are easier to get rid of than books, aren’t they?
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I don’t know what I’d do if libraries didn’t exist. I’m constantly getting books out.
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They are wonderful, aren’t they? I’ve worked in them all my life — public, academic, and now school. And the best thing about being a librarian is NO FINES! ;-)
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I’m also a bibliophile and have been planning to line my library with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves… I once gave away a box to the church library, and have been meaning to go through my books and pare my collection down to what will fit on my shelves. I feel the same way about books vs. Kindle–I love the beauty of books as much as their contents. But I’ve been visiting the library more frequently as I’m realizing that I don’t need to own every single book I want to read… There’s only so much room in a little cottage!
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I like your idea of building shelves that fit and keeping the collection down to what fits on those shelves. I think that will be my goal!
Sent from my iPhone so please excuse spelling errors.
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Oh, such a great post and I will check out your other recent ones! I have found my mother’s habit of saving quite a nuisance as I get older! Wonderful writing style with a serious subject but fun attitude!
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Thanks! I’ve been trying to keep a good attitude by remembering that it is me, myself, and I who kept all this stuff in the first place!
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The last time I did a “do it yourself” move across country, after selling furniture and appliances, and only taking what fit in my car, I put the books in first. That way anything that didn’t fit after books, could easily be left behind. The clothes were the last to go in the car, and could have easily been up for donation. But the books, no way.
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Hey, you can stuff those books all over the car! Were you still finding them months later? ;-)
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No, but that would have been a pleasant surprise. I have a RAV4, not a lot of nooks and crannies.
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