Food and water are necessities. Everything else is a luxury.
Back to Basics: Food, Water, and the Illusion of Necessity
Our lives are brimming with distractions, desires, and digital overload.
It’s easy to lose sight of what truly matters.
We spend our days chasing goals, accumulating things, and striving for more.
More success, more convenience, more recognition.
But when you strip everything back to basics, what do we really need?
Food and water. Nothing more.
These two simple necessities sustain every human life on this planet.
They are the foundation upon which all else is built.
Yet we seldom stop to appreciate their importance.
We've built complex lives filled with objects and obligations.
Wrongly elevating wants to the level of needs.
The truth is, everything beyond food and water is a luxury.
Your new smartphone? A luxury. Your big, expensive car? A luxury.
The soft bed, the streaming shows, the gourmet coffee, the gym membership, the new pair of shoes. All luxuries.
That’s not to say luxuries are bad.
They can enrich our lives, inspire creativity, and bring comfort.
But when we start to view them as essential, we lose sight of the privilege that surrounds us.
We fall into the trap of constant comparison and never-ending dissatisfaction.
Reframing the Record
If we start each day realizing that food and water are the only necessities, our mindset changes.
We’d complain less. We’d consume less. We’d recognize abundance instead of lack.
We’d feel more peace, more gratitude, and possibly even more freedom.
It’s a perspective that humbles us, but also empowers us.
Because once you realize how little you "need" the pressure of “not having enough” starts to lift.
Living with Intention.
This isn’t a call to renounce all modern comforts.
Or retreat into the wilderness (unless that’s your thing).
It’s a gentle invitation to reflect.
On whether our lives are driven by genuine necessity or by the noise of expectation and excess.
So next time you feel overwhelmed, unsatisfied, or stuck in the pursuit of more, pause and ask yourself:
Do I have food? Do I have water?
If the answer is yes, you already have what it takes to keep going.
Everything else? That’s just the cherry on top.
The Minimalist Mindset.
Rooted in intentionality, simplicity, and clarity.
It’s not about deprivation.
It’s not about owning nothing or rejecting comfort.
It’s about realising that "enough" is a moving target, and deciding to stop chasing more for the sake of more.
Minimalism asks one key question: Does this add value to my life?
You start to notice how much time, money, and mental energy goes into maintaining things that don’t serve you.
You see how clutter (both physical and digital) distracts you from peace.
You realize how much stress comes from trying to keep up with the expectations of others.
Which you never signed up for in the first place.
Minimalism isn’t about having less.
It’s about making space, space for what actually matters.
Living With Less, Living With More
Ironically, it’s when we reduce the excess that we start to experience more:
More clarity, because our minds aren’t buried in noise.
More gratitude, because we appreciate the basics.
More freedom, because we’re no longer owned by our "stuff".
More presence, because we’re not constantly pulled into the future.
And most important: more peace, because we remember that we are already okay.
Right here. Right now.
A Minimalist Practice for Today
Here’s a simple way to put this into action:
Gratitude Check-In
Ask yourself, “Do I have food today? Do I have clean water?” If yes, breathe that in. That’s life, right there.Need vs. Want
The next time you're about to buy something, ask yourself: Is this a need, or a want acting as a need?Declutter One Thing
Choose one item (physical or digital) that doesn’t serve you anymore, and let it go. Make room for what does.Simplify a Routine
Pick an area of life - your morning, your meals, your wardrobe - and simplify it. Less choice can mean more peace.Minimalism is not a trend. It’s not an aesthetic. It’s a return to what’s real.
Food and water are necessities. All else are luxuries.
With very best wishes,
Chris Wilkinson.
Messenger of Hope.