Inspiring Mother Carina: @carinamarienilsson

When I started posting more about minimalism last summer, sharing my interest in paring down my possessions and responsibilities, Carina was one of the first people to speak up and encourage me. Living in Vancouver, a very densely built Canadian city, with what most would consider to be astronomical housing prices, can be the instigation one needs to adopt a minimalist lifestyle. If you love your city, you love where you live, then you arrange your lifestyle to make it work, and if that means four people live in a one bedroom apartment, so that you live steps from the ocean and in a vibrant community, then you don’t think twice about the two-car garage in suburbia with a front and back yard that you could have for the same price, or probably less. And if, on the other hand, suburbia is the vibrant community that makes you feel alive and inspired then that’s the right place for you. I’m not sure if the reasons I’ve read into Carina’s choice to live in Vancouver are accurate, but my intuition tells me I’m not far off.

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I can’t remember when I first came to know Carina. I know it wasn’t that long ago, but at the same time I feel like I’ve known her forever. She’s one of those people who has the rare gift of making you feel like an old friend, finding a genuine way of connecting with people, even through the ether of cyberspace. Carina and I first connected through our interest in minimalism, and then we found out we shared a background in dance, a love for the arts, a strange fondness for colourful walls, and an addiction to the outdoors. In terms of her parenting, what I particularly love about Carina is her total commitment to letting her children be themselves, in fact, she celebrates their individuality and differences. What a gift she is to her children.
I hope you will enjoy hearing from Carina, herself, in my interview with her.
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What part of the world do you live in?
I am very lucky to live in Vancouver, Canada – right around False Creek, which is a small inlet right in the heart of the city. Our neighbourhood is appropriately called Mount Pleasant, and it’s where we work, go to school, and meet friends. What I love most about Vancouver is the ability to get out into the wilderness in a moment. Whether you want to camp in the bush, fish a river, ride a horse, or go mountain climbing, all of that and more is at your fingertips in Vancouver.
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How many children do you have and how would you describe them?
I have two children. Finn is my 8 year old daughter. You can often find her eye deep in books, or being told by her teachers that she’s a Chatty Cathy. Her favourite colour is black. Augustus is my 5 year old son. You can find him singing to himself while crouched over a book drawing, or as a blur as he tears around the apartment playing a grand adventure game he’s made up. He prefers bright floral patterns and animal prints. He is currently trying to grow his hair out long like his sister’s because he “thinks her hair looks beautiful when she runs”.
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What are your core family values?
I guess our family values are best described by what my husband Cyrus and I teach Finn and Gus. Being mindful of others: so making sure that you are open, kind, and considerate. Make memories rather than desiring things. Keeping life simple: this covers everything from the toys in their room, to the daily activities we commit our time to. Most important: let the people that matter to you, know that they matter to you.

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How do you spend most of your days?

Most of my days are spent getting the kids to school, myself to work, then the kids to dance/soccer/etc. In the wee hours of the morning or the dark hours of the night you can probably find me working on my illustrations (website coming soon!) or on the website I co-founded with my dear friend, Bree, Peaks & Harbours – both creative pursuits that I adore. I have regular “dates” with my girlfriends – which I wholeheartedly believe is a crucial part of maintaining that work/kids/life balance. Our weekends are usually reserved for family outdoor adventures. We love to camp, explore forests, or head to Vancouver Island – where my wonderful parents live – for fishing or surfing. Really just any adventure that we can get our hands on is what energizes our little family.
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What are you passionate about?
I am super passionate about being connected to a supportive community. With the website that I run with my dear friend Bree, we focus on featuring local artists, makers, entrepreneurs, and so on – particularly we highlight women who happen to be mothers, that have taken the plunge towards making their own passions into a career that will also support their families. In my 9-5 job I work in the non-profit arts sector, so I would say that I am also passionate about the arts and exposing myself and my kids to as much of it as possible.
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What inspires you?
I would have to say that my children inspire me, and have changed my life for the better in so many ways. They have made me stop and think “is this what I really need?”, and so I attribute my enthusiasm for living minimally to them, because I don’t want them to be driven by a need to acquire “things”. When I’m feeling burnt out, they motivate me to get up and go outside to recharge. They have encouraged me to think deeply about what is important to me, so that I can pass those values and traditions on to them. That being said, they don’t have to love art, or play an instrument, or embrace Swedish/Italian culture, but I do want them to know that if there’s something that you adore and are passionate about, then you should embrace it – even if it doesn’t work out, you can always change your path, and things might work out even better than you expected.
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Thank you Carina for sharing your wisdom and photography with us. Readers:  You can find Carina on Instagram @carinamarienilsson and on her superb blog Peaks and Harbours. Please visit her and say hello, you won’t regret it.
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Processed with VSCOcam with c1 preset   You might also like my post: Minimalist Book Tour

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Minimalist Book World Tour

A few months ago I was asked by a fellow Instagrammer to share “what I’m reading now.” It was fortuitous timing. Now, I’m usually reading at least 3 books at any one time, but one book in particular that I was reading had me feeling a little conflicted. I was reading Everything That Remains, by a writing duo who call themselves the Minimalists. I had wanted to buy the book for quite a while, however, as someone trying to minimize my consumption of things, I didn’t want to acquire yet another book, not to mention one about minimalism! The irony! And so, rather than buy the book I decided to satiate my interest in minimalism by reading online books and articles. Ultimately, I told myself it would be okay to buy the book as long as I ensured that many people would read it. However, I had no real plan as to how I would make that happen. And so, from that simple question “what am I reading?” sprang the idea to share the book through the Instagram community. So that’s what I did. (You can see my original Instagram post about it here.)

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The initial post on Instagram garnered significant interest, including a request from Carina and Bree over at the Peaks and Harbours blog, to write a post about the book tour I had planned. Please visit their blog to read my post and to learn how the book tour works. In a nutshell, the book is travelling around the world from one person to the next. I maintain a list of interested readers and share one address with each reader — the address of the person they are to send the book to next. If you are interested in joining in please send me an email at hippieindisguise1@gmail.com. I’m still taking names.

As a little aside, I should probably clarify that the book is about lifestyle minimalism as opposed to design/art  minimalism. I’m not sure anyone is using the term lifestyle minimalism, aside from me, but I think it helps distinguish the two strands. Lifestyle minimalism is about living with fewer things and fewer obligations, to make room for those people, things and responsibilities that really, as the Minimalists would say, “add value” to your life and the lives of others. Minimalism, popular in design, art and interiors, is about paring things down to the essential; form and function are one. Certainly the two strands of minimalism share many of the same concepts, but focus them in different areas.

During the spring of 2014, I had strong urge to reconnect with and better understand the roots of design minimalism when I saw what appeared to be people identifying as ‘minimalists’ while conspicuously consuming things. It seemed to be contradictory, at least to me, so I wanted to learn more about the current thinking around minimalism. So I started reading contemporary writings and came across the writings of Leo Babauta and the Minimalists. They conveyed a different flavour of minimalism than I was seeing elsewhere online. Their writing really reinvigorated my own natural desires to live in a minimal way. I have always been drawn to simple, light living, for both environmental and, for lack of a better term, psychological reasons. (I am really someone who’s inner mind reflects the state of the space around me, and so to feel calm and be creative, I need calm, blank spaces.) Everything that Remains really helped me understand in a new way how the space around you and  the commitments you make can support or hinder your creativity.

Currently, my copy of Everything that Remains is travelling across Canada, before it takes a tour through the United States. After North America there are stops in Europe, Australia and Asia. I’m hoping to have destinations on every continent before it comes back home to me. Or better yet, I hope the book keeps travelling and connecting people around the globe, until it is completely worn out. A book that lives a full life and fills many lives with inspiration is a book worth buying.

Stay tuned for updates on the book’s travels; I’ll be posting stories from its readers after every five stops or so.

If you aren’t able to sign up for the book tour you can buy the book here, and maybe when you are done reading you can send it on to someone else.

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On doing things imperfectly

Danielle Chassin Hippie in Disguise
Quality is important, but seeking perfection can lead to paralysis. At least it can for me. I have wanted to start a blog for a long time, but the perfectionist in me prevented me from actually doing it. It had to be perfect, if I were to do it at all.

Perfection can also paralyze people from pursuing change. That is, some people won’t try something if they can’t do it purely or perfectly. Myself included. I’ve heard this excuse many times in response to people telling me why they couldn’t be vegan. “I would totally  go vegan, but I just love cheese/sushi/lattes.” To which I usually respond, “Well, why not be a vegan who eats sushi?” It might not be purist or perfect veganism, but it is a lot closer than not trying at all. I encourage others to find comfort in imperfection, that is, to permit themselves to do things imperfectly. (After all, there are very few things anyone can do perfectly, all of the time or ever.) And yet, I rarely afford myself this same latitude.

And so…after many rational, and many more irrational reasons, for delaying the launch of my blog — yes, mostly related to getting it perfect — I am going ahead now, knowing it will never be perfect and that is perfectly  fine.

For the past two years, I have shared bits and pieces of our family life through my Instagram account @hippieindisguise, and while I think Instagram is an excellent social media platform, I have often wanted more space to write and provide greater detail on our activities, based on requests from my kind and curious friends and followers. On this site I will document the moments I share with my children adventuring around our city to rivers, fields, parks, and pools, visiting galleries and museums, seeking out public and street art, crafting with natural materials, drawing, painting, and cooking — the everyday moments that make up a childhood and connect our family.

I will also share interviews with people who have inspired me as parents, as artists, as entrepreneurs, as people. I think it is really important to honour our inspirations. I want to create a space where I give people credit for the good they put out into the world. Stay tuned, I will post my first interview later this week!

Finally, while I am pursuing a minimalist lifestyle, paring down my possessions to the essential, I will from time to time share products here that I believe are worth choosing, if you are in need, because they are organic, fair trade, or handmade, for example.

So, that’s the plan, it’s not perfect, but I’m okay with that.

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Let’s be friends! Please come find me in other places:

Have you subscribed to the Global Guardian Project yet? These are monthly learning capsules for children and families to learn about global stewardship. Each month features a different country’s wild life, landscape and challenges, and includes art projects, activities, meditation, recipes and more! Use my discount code: HIPPIEINDISGUISE for 10% off, you can read more about it here

…in development…

Danielle Chassin Hippie in Disguise
Welcome! I am currently developing a blog about my adventures with my husband, Matt, and two children, Ro and Sen, pursuing a minimalist lifestyle focused on collecting moments rather than things.

I hope to have the blog live January 2015, so please subscribe or come back soon. Thank you for stopping by.

If you are interesting in collaborating with me please email me at hippieindisguise1@gmail.com. Thank you.