fbpx
Screenshot 2023-12-11 at 11.03.47 PM

How to Create Freedom & Luxury Through Intentional Minimalism w/Meg Nordmann

Promo
Wish you could get your content seen more?

Wish you could get your content seen more?

Grab our 63+ engagement-boosting questions you can use right now to attract your ideal person and get them excited about you and what you offer.  Grab them here!

Our world is moving away from an emphasis on accumulating possessions as a measure of success, and towards the understanding that time is the true luxury. 

Having more time gives us the power to pursue the things that matter most, and an excess of stuff robs us of that luxury. 

Minimalism is one of the most impactful ways to get more out of our time, especially as we head into the holiday season. This is the time people struggle the most with stress as marketing messages pressure us to buy and accumulate more stuff. 

The stress of excess possessions affects our kids too. By simplifying and paring down, we make their lives better and teach them to value what truly matters. 

How can we apply minimalist principles to our lives, homes, and gift receiving? How do we set the stage for our kids to see time, not possessions, as the true gift? 

In this episode, I’m joined by the author of Have Yourself a Minimalist Christmas, Meg Nordmann. We discuss how to navigate the emotional side of decluttering and why intentional minimalism benefits our children and gives us the space and time to focus on what we love.

“The word to focus on isn’t minimalism, it’s intentionality. It’s about trying to be more intentional about our stuff by simplifying, curating, and editing things down to what truly matters.”

-Meg Nordmann

 

Things You’ll Learn In This Episode

 

  1. How clutter affects our children
    An excess of stuff in our places causes stress and higher cortisol levels. Our children also get just as overwhelmed, if not more when their rooms and our homes are cluttered. They aren’t built to manage the cortisol levels that come with clutter. 
  2. The true meaning of minimalism
    Minimalism doesn’t mean getting rid of things we love. It’s all about being more intentional about what we own and buy. By paring down to what’s essential and what we truly love, we experience the luxury of having more time to pursue what matters. 
  3. How minimalism can improve our holiday season experience
    The tradition around Christmas has been built around the anticipation of gifts and getting more stuff. Through minimalism and intentionality, we can teach our children to focus more on making memories as a family, rather than what we’re going to get. 
  4. How to talk about minimalism with our friends and family
    Don’t use the word minimalism or decluttering because it might trip them up, scare, or confuse them. Lead them to understand that having more stuff means overwhelm, stress, and a lack of time. Once they understand this, we can steer them towards experience gifts and consumable gifts instead of things that create clutter.

 

Guest Bio- 

Meg Nordmann is the author of Have Yourself a Minimalist Christmas, a new book that was published on September 1st this year in print, ebook, and audiobook formats and is intended to be read in the fall months in preparation for Christmas. Meg is also the mother of two messy little girls who were the catalyst for her becoming a minimalist, along with her goal to achieve financial independence in order to retire early. A former newspaper and magazine journalist and editor, Meg is now a full-time mother who writes, blogs, and speaks about minimalism and creating the luxury of time to pursue the things that matter the most to her. She recently launched a podcast on this topic called Journey to Freedom that explores how minimalism and frugality can lead to financial freedom and time freedom. She’s excited to share her tips on how to have a simpler, less expensive, and more intentional holiday this season. 

Visit http://megnordmann.com/book/ to learn more about Meg and her book.

 

(NOTE: The links on this page are affiliate links)

This Show was Made Possible By: 


WHAT IF YOU HAD A PROVEN FRAMEWORK TO BRING YOUR BUSINESS TO CONSISTENT 2K-3K MONTHS?

Welcome to the Nurture To Convert Society, the preferred membership for driven women entrepreneurs who want a predictable way to scale your business to those consistent four figure months.

Get ready to simplify the ENTIRE process of how you engage and create content for social media. Position yourself as a leader and authority in your space. Make unique content, create A-HA moments for your audience in such a natural way you will connect and convert in no time. It’s literally the same strategy that we used to build the Boss Mom Brand and we are seeing women everywhere starting to get the freedom they deserve…both time and financial freedom.

JOIN THE NURTURE TO CONVERT SOCIETY FOR $47/MONTH

And if you always feel like there isn’t enough time and you can’t handle one more thing. Then you need to get our free training on “Exactly how to structure your time so you can consistently grow your business in less than 15 hours a week”

It will give you permission to stop doing a few things and give you the exact weekly schedule to grow your business in less time. And I’m a mom of two so I know how precious time is, and how unpredictable life can be.

Grab the free training at www.boss-mom.com/time

vertical - promo
Dana Malstaff

Dana Malstaff

Dana Malstaff is the Founder of Boss Mom and creator Nurture to Convert.
She is a mother, author, speaker, messaging strategist, podcaster, blind spot reducer, and movement maker. She believes that too many brilliant moms are struggling to figure out how to grow their business while balancing all that is required to be a good mom, partner, and woman. So many moms are trying to grow their business using trends that feel inauthentic and aren't realistic for their inconsistent schedules. She has helped thousands of women become known for their brain and not their dance moves

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.