I'm condiersing selling all of my stuff. And by all, I mean almost everything. I've got too much stuff in different areas of interest and for "one day".
Bit of a long winded answer, so bear with me...
A couple years ago someone sent me a link to a TED talk by a guy named Barry Schwartz called
The Paradox of Choice. Found it interesting enough to pick up
the book. One of the reasons I liked it is that it's not a self help book, it's a scientific book about what happens and how we react to a huge range of choices.
So after reading that book and thinking about it for a while, I decided to try a bit of a personal, long term experiment. I made a list of all the things that I do, and I mean *everything*. Hobbies, work, passions, etc. Was a surprisingly long list.
Now for the experiment part -- I ruthlessly went down that list and identified things that were not critical for me, and got rid of them. Gave away my skis, beer brewing stuff, target shooting stuff. Instituted a hard limit of one old car and one modern motorcycle. Gave myself one year with the limited activity list to see how I would fare.
I've never been happier.
With less stuff/activities pulling at me, I can enjoy the remaining ones much deeper and fuller. Now I snowshoe in the winter if I want to get out. I've only got one old car to put time and resources into. Allowed me to build my barn smaller so I could pay cash and not have to have debt hanging over me.
After that first year the downsizing has continued. It's not like I have a small amount of stuff by world standards, but my limited activity list has kept things modest. I hike/snowshoe, camp, enjoy the MGB, and play music. Add in a day job and family and I'm content.
Our stuff can easily own us. It is, after all, just stuff. Control the stuff and you'll be happier for it.
Wish I were closer, would love to swing over with a beverage of choice and have a long chat about this -- it's a topic near and dear to my heart.