Our trainer first said this line during a writing activity. At scheduled times during the day, we would read our drafts aloud and receive feedback—which invariably centered around cutting extraneous words and phrases, since less is more. We would write the feedback in the margins of our papers to inform the next draft.
That was one of my learnings from the workshop: we all need margins. The trainer wanted us to write as succinctly and clearly as possible; hence her less is more advice. But in the frame of margins, I see less is more as a gift for other facets of my life, too.
- With margins, what matters is surrounded and protected.
- With margins, we can add or expand when needed.
- With margins, we can highlight what impacts us.
This happens with the written word, of course. It also happens with the manner in which we schedule our day—is it too full?—or share in conversations—is enough time afforded for thoughtful response?
From planning to devote a day to writing, to taking the time to talk to a family member, to delivering service to a client, do you have margins? Are you allowing less to be more?
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