Monday 14 March 2016

The appeal of the minimal

While I'm sat here chewing my leg like an animal in a trap, waiting for the plantar fasciitis to feck off and let me run again, I've been pondering the appeal of the minimal.

Runners always try to carry as little as possible - it's more comfortable that way. There's a constant process of working out what stuff to carry to keep the bulk down. Water, warmth, food, in that order.

Minimalism isn't completely embraced by runners though, there are many who favour the gadget led approach, and constantly try to improve their performance by the latest in lycra socks, padded running shoes etc.

The bushcraft community have a minimalist strand: limited kit challenges. The challenge is to choose the right gear and have the right skills to keep warm, fed and comfortable, often overnight or for a few nights. Generally warm clothes, some kind of firelighter, a water (boiling) vessel and an axe will do the trick.

Lightweight backpackers sound like they should be minimal, but actually many are chronic kit fiends, constantly buying new gear in search of the perfect low weight set up. For some though, the aim is to have a single, ideal set up that is simple & lightweight. It's just that the quest to attain that simplicity introduces complexity.

Programmers love minimalism too. The very best code does the job as simply as possible. That doesn't mean the fewest characters: code golf is interesting but not necessarily elegant. To be a good solution a piece of code must be simple and concise. Unfortunately marketing tends to mean that software accumulates lots of 'features' as a selling point, when a simpler feature set would often make the application simpler, more reliable and stable.

Poetry is an expression of simplicity, condensing the themes and message of prose into as compact and elegant a form as possible.

I don't know whether there's an innate desire for simplicity and minimalism in people - loads of folk seem to favour accumulating possessions and complex gadgetry. For me though, simplicity has a strong appeal, that comes out in:

software
minimal shoes
minimal carry for running
lightweight backpacking (without things being disposable)
primitive projectile weapons (simple bow, atlatl, sling)
universal tools (a light hand axe was probably the key tool of man throughout our tool using existence)

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