Minimalist FocusMinimalist Focus
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Tips
  • Travel
  • More
    • Culture
    • Design
    • Life
    • Work
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Minimalist FocusMinimalist Focus
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Fashion
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Tips
  • Travel
  • More
    • Culture
    • Design
    • Life
    • Work
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Minimalist FocusMinimalist Focus
Life

Intentional Consumption Explained – 8 Minimalist Consumer Habits For Mindful Living

By KathyJanuary 25, 2020Updated:December 11, 20208 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit Telegram WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Reddit Telegram WhatsApp Email

Mindful living is often associated with “less.” Less stuff, less burden, and less consumption. Get rid of your things, buy less – and your life will be fulfilled. That’s a misinterpretation. A simple decline in consumption – without the proper attitude – will not improve your life in the long run. The nuance lies in intentional consumption.  

This article may contain affiliate links. Please see our disclaimer policy here.

Intentionality focuses on the reasons behind a certain consumer decision. When talking about mindful living, many people highlight the sustainability argument – live mindfully to reduce your ecological footprint. All well and good, but this is not my point. 

You might see minimalism as a way to save the polar bear, to improve your finances, or to resist trends. Reasons vary.

The main goal is to cultivate minimalist values and to align them with your consumption habits. 

Consequently, your why is important. In the spirit of mindful living, it doesn’t matter what you buy. It matters why you buy it.

8 minimalist consumer habits to live mindfully

On this basis, here are eight minimalist consumer habits to help you develop a personal set of values. 

Intentional Consumption - 8 minimalist consumer habits for mindful living
Picture by Nathan Dumlao / Unsplash

Make lists for different categories of goods

Ever heard the phrase: “don’t shop while you’re hungry?”  

Nutrition experts often underline the negative effects of an empty stomach inside a supermarket. In this vein, hungry people tend to buy a lot of excess food. Emotions — in essence: food cravings, not reason — drive their purchases.

The same applies to other areas. If you wander into a tech store dreaming about the new iPhone XYZ, you’ll be more likely to purchase the item without thinking straight. That’s where shopping lists come to fruition.

Let’s cite the example of clothes. Most people don’t know how many t-shirts, pants, shirts, and shoes they need.

To counter this uncertainty, a “fashion inventory” list – containing a fixed number of different types of clothes – will keep your shopping impulses at bay. 

After reaching your self-defined number in a specific category, implement a “one in – one out” mentality.

It might be hard at first, but once you start living more mindfully, your purchasing caps will become self-evident.

No matter the goods, immutable lists will separate your genuine needs and your unnecessary excesses when it comes to shopping plans. 

Delay every major purchase

Mindful living includes taking the time to analyze products properly. Before you start lamenting your daily busyness, I am not talking about coke cans here. 

The delay argument refers to more expensive, non-everyday purchases. For instance, if you think about buying a new television today, you might change your mind tomorrow – for better or worse. Spontaneous deals can indeed be great investments, but the majority aren’t. 

Even if you sometimes make a mistake by waiting, you will have made qualified decisions. 

On this basis, delaying significant purchases will further your general mindfulness and improve the mechanics of your decision. It might not always be the best decision – but it will undoubtedly be an informed one. 

What does that mean in concrete terms? As a rule of thumb, always delaying 100$+ purchases for at least one week is a good benchmark. 

Don’t copy other people 

Keeping up with the Joneses is a major consumption trap. You might see your friends wearing the newest sneakers and driving the latest space-age car. Guess what: their priorities might differ from yours. 

Intentional consumption is about finding your own style and pursuing your minimalist habits.

As an example, your neighbors may be massive gearheads and change their cars every two years. You, on the other hand, could find more joy in traveling the world regularly. Once you grasp the importance of personal spending decisions, you’ll stop worrying about what other people have and start embracing your wishes.

Use up your supplies of everyday goods 

Before I understood the efficacy of everyday minimalist consumer habits, I hoarded certain everyday goods just because I could. I used to buy five different types of rice, four brands of soap, three sets of perfumes, and lots of face and beard products.

Even though I still use these products, I stopped buying them in bulk.

I also started to transfer them into label-free containers. Removing the labels purifies my living space and also subconsciously tempers the urge to add new products.

On this basis, transfer all of your supplies of rice, pasta, beauty-, and other everyday products into label-free containers and use them up before refilling.

The transfer will help you live more mindfully by showcasing your real necessities. It will also make it easier to resist buying temptations – your focus will slowly shift toward intentional consumption as opposed to mindless hoarding. 

Intentional consumption - minimalist consumer habits - Use up your supplies of everyday goods

Keep track of your purchases 

Most of us don’t even know what we buy regularly. Much like shopping lists, keeping track of our purchases is a proven method to live more mindfully. 

Write down every purchase over a certain period, and you will soon feel more organized and less exposed to momentary consumer urges.

Understand your reasons for buying something 

Intentional consumption is all about establishing purchasing patterns. Try to understand why you bought something.

Was that coat necessary because I live in Alaska, or did I buy it to look like Jon Snow?

Once you understand your reasons, you can gradually adopt your own consumption rules.

Over time, a decision to buy something will become the result of a thought process – not a mere impulse.  

While there can always be exceptional, spontaneous decisions, the vast majority of purchases will follow your pre-defined consumption norms. 

In simple terms, here are some good and bad buying arguments:  

  • Good reasons: quality, durability, joy, value.
  • Bad reasons: trends, cheapness, peer pressure, spontaneous cravings. 

Define your wishes and necessities 

The 21st century brought us some fantastic consumption novelties, but it also blurred the lines between wishes and necessities. 

Ubiquitous ads, peer pressure, and media manipulation now make us want things we neither need nor care about.

Nevertheless, our minimalist mindset should define our genuine needs and wants.

Everyone has different preferences, but there are numerous ways to delineate wishes and necessities. In this context, here are some characteristics to help you define your needs and wants.

  • Needs: you use it every day; it is essential to your job; it makes you happy long-term; it improves your mindfulness; it is an investment in yourself. 
  • Wants: you didn’t know about it before you saw an ad; your friends tell you how great it is; you don’t know whether it adds value to your life; you already have something similar; you buy it because it’s cheap. 

Re-evaluate products a couple of months after buying them 

Once your buying rules are clear, you’ll be able to reassess every purchase you made in the last 6 months. 

You can sort your purchases into three categories: the good ones, the daft ones, and the doubtful ones. 

The “good buys” are the products that – after a couple of months or even years – still adhere to your mindful living rules. As an example, I bought a G-Shock GA100-1A1 military-grade watch a couple of years ago.

It has been to over 20 countries and never let me down.  I used it while diving in deep seas, trekking through jungles, or jumping out of a plane. Eight years after I bought it, I still consider it a great purchase. 

Like everyone, I am guilty of some idiotic buys over the years. I once bought an expensive bright green jacket only to realize that the color didn’t match any other outfit I had. Needless to say, the jacket falls into the second category. 

The doubtful buys are the items you are still unsure about – even after checking them according to your intentional consumption criteria. There are a couple of solutions. 

Radical minimalists would simply erase this category and mark these items as “senseless buys.”

A more subtle approach would involve waiting a couple more months and re-evaluating the products by using personal keep or sell rules. 

Intentional consumption - good and bad purchases - G-Shock watch
Fir for every purpose and a good buy: the Casio G-Shock military-grade watch

Useful links on Intentional Consumption – Mindful Living Habits

  • check out the best label-free food containers: the Oggi canisters on Amazon
  • read The 10 Principles of Minimalism 
  • read The Best Minimalist Purchases to Simplify Your Life
  • more under the topic “Spending”
  • read Keep or Sell Stuff – How to Decide in 7 Steps
  • read How to Adopt a Minimalist Mindset in 10 Practical Steps

Intentional consumption minimalist consumer habits pin

Don’t miss a beat!

[mailpoet_form id=”5″]

Mindset Spending
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit Telegram WhatsApp Email
Previous ArticleMy Minimalist “Good Habits List” – 10 Simple Habits For a Daily Dose of Decluttering
Next Article My Minimalist EDC – 7 Things I Never Leave The House Without
Kathy

Meet Kathy, the mindful mind behind the words at minimalistfocus.com. With an innate ability to distill the essence of life down to its purest form, Kathy's writing resonates with those seeking clarity in a cluttered world.

Related Post

Exploring the Best Cafes in Riyadh: A Guide to the City’s Top Coffee Shops

February 20, 2025

Whole Life Insurance: A Comprehensive Guide

March 15, 2024

What Advancements Have Been Made in Smartwatches with AMOLED Display?

March 15, 2024

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Most Popular

Business

Boosting Productivity with Streamlined Cloud Solutions

By KathyMay 18, 2025

Cloud solutions could be the answer. They help teams work from anywhere, stay organized, and…

Incorporating Metal Ceilings in Minimalist Spaces

May 18, 2025

Streamlining Life with Drone Technology: A Guide to Efficiency

May 18, 2025

How to Tell if Your Child Is Being Groomed Online

May 18, 2025
Our Picks

3 Fried Rice Varieties Perfect For Every Party

May 19, 2025

2 Melt-in-your-mouth Traditional Indian Sweet Delights

May 19, 2025

Unlocking a Universe of Entertainment with Krooz TV IPTV

May 19, 2025

Top Picks

Top Insulator Products and Solutions Explained

May 19, 2025

How AI Business Plan Writers Save You Time and Money

May 19, 2025

Best Highlights in Houston TX – Shine Bright with Marbella Salon

May 18, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Minimalistfocus about Business, Travel, Tips and More.

  • About Us
  • Archives
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
Minimalistfocus.com © 2025 All Right Reserved

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.