Best selling author of The Life-Changing Magic Of Tidying Up and decluttering guru star of popular Netflix series Tidying Up With Marie Kondo became a life philosophy sensation by encouraging material minimalism. The crux of her teachings can be summed up by a need for people to rid themselves of unnecessary goods in their home that don't “spark joy.”
However, the recent opening of her online store has many accusing her of betraying her minimalist principles, pedaling the clutter she often denounces. but people are questioning that motive based on the types of items she is selling, their price, and necessity:
Marie Kondo opening an online shop that sells dumb crap you don’t need is my favorite heel turn of 2019. pic.twitter.com/4lFa28NadS
Kondo writes on the shop's website that "The goal of tidying is to make room for meaningful objects, people and experiences. I can think of no greater happiness in life than being surrounded only by the things I love.” Yet there are some reasonable questions being asked about the necessity of, for example, the following items:
Gold ladle ($96)
Large cheese knife ($180)
Tuning fork and rose quartz crystal ($75)
Brass tool holder ($275)
Large serving bowl ($220)
Computer brush ($35)
Desktop box ($75)
While some have knocked the self-help guide as putting a price on minimalism:
marie kondo playing the long game. get rid of your dumb shit, so you can buy *my* dumb shit. incredible. the next jeff bezos
— dj ripley raised a beetroot into the air & shouted (@laripley) November 19, 2019
Others have pointed out that Kondo's philosophy has never been strictly about rigid minimalism, but simply reducing one's goods to those that provide positive energy:
I don’t get the hate here. Technically it’s not that she told them to throw out their stuff, it’s that she told them to go through and and let go of what wasn’t giving them joy in their life anymore. She also never said you can never buy stuff again.
your reminder not to trust white peoples' takes on Marie Kondo, which are rooted in willful misinterpretations of her work and outsized in comparison with what she's actually done while we let white celebrities skate on this shit all the time https://t.co/h1lERHoGgF
Best selling author of The Life-Changing Magic Of Tidying Up and decluttering guru star of popular Netflix series Tidying Up With Marie Kondo became a life philosophy sensation by encouraging material minimalism. The crux of her teachings can be summed up by a need for people to rid themselves of unnecessary goods in their home that don't “spark joy.”
However, the recent opening of her online store has many accusing her of betraying her minimalist principles, pedaling the clutter she often denounces. but people are questioning that motive based on the types of items she is selling, their price, and necessity:
Kondo writes on the shop's website that "The goal of tidying is to make room for meaningful objects, people and experiences. I can think of no greater happiness in life than being surrounded only by the things I love.” Yet there are some reasonable questions being asked about the necessity of, for example, the following items:
Gold ladle ($96)
Large cheese knife ($180)
Tuning fork and rose quartz crystal ($75)
Brass tool holder ($275)
Large serving bowl ($220)
Computer brush ($35)
Desktop box ($75)
While some have knocked the self-help guide as putting a price on minimalism:
Others have pointed out that Kondo's philosophy has never been strictly about rigid minimalism, but simply reducing one's goods to those that provide positive energy: