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Copyright 2012, 2017, 2021 by Jen Hatmaker
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Convergent Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
Convergent Books is a registered trademark and its C colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.
Originally published in significantly different form under the title 7: An Experimental Mutiny Against Excess in the United States by LifeWay Press, Nashville, in 2012, and subsequently self-published in 2017.
Hardback ISBN9780593236765
Ebook ISBN9780593236772
Unless otherwise noted, all Scripture quotations are taken from the Holman Christian Standard Bible, copyright 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2009 by Holman Bible Publishers. Used by permission. Holman Christian Standard Bible, Holman CSB, and HCSB are federally registered trademarks of Holman Bible Publishers. Scripture quotations marked ( MSG ) are taken from The Message, copyright 1993, 2002, 2018 by Eugene H. Peterson. Used by permission of NavPress, represented by Tyndale House Publishers. All rights reserved. Scripture quotations marked ( NASB ) are from the New American Standard Bible, copyright 1960, 1971, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation. Used by permission. All rights reserved. (www.lockman.org). Scripture quotations marked ( NIV ) are from the Holy Bible, New International Version, NIV. Copyright 1973, 1978, 1984 by Biblica, Inc. Used by permission of Zondervan. All rights reserved worldwide. (www.zondervan.com). The NIV and New International Version are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office by Biblica, Inc. Scripture quotations marked ( NKJV ) are from the New King James Version. Copyright 1982 by Thomas Nelson. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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Design by Elizabeth Rendfleisch, adapted for ebook
Cover Design: Pete Garceau
Cover Image: iStock/Lutavia
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SIMPLE & FREESEVEN YEARS LATER
Welcome! Welcome to this story, Risk Takers, Trouble Makers, Rule Breakers, Status Quo Upenders, World Changers, Question Askers, Rabble Rousers. Im guessing you fit in at least one of those categories or you wouldnt be interested in a story like this one. Something is under your skin. Something feelsoffabout how much you have, how much you spend, how much you waste. Maybe it is all completely undefined, as it was for me when I first began this adventure seven years ago. Or maybe you are just munching popcorn and here for the free show.
Either way, I couldnt be happier to welcome you into a little social experiment that changed our lives for good. I can say that now, because although this specific season is in my rearview mirror, as I read back through every word recorded during Simple & Free (formerly ), I was surprised how many ideas were new to me then, because they are the air we breathe today. Let that be good news to you: No matter if anything you read here seems too hard or too crazy or too overwhelming, maybe it will just be Step One into a new idea. And in seven years, youll discover an assimilation so deeply embedded in your life, you wont even remember not thinking that way.
Also, you may say in seven years: Im glad that part is over. Lets just be honest. Eating the same seven foods for four weeks is bananas (a food item I sadly did not partake of during that month). What we learned during and since Simple & Free was that the mechanics of it all were temporary but the lessons were permanent. And that is exactly why I am glad you are here.
Let me tell you what is different now from when I first wrote Simple & Free . This will be obvious if youve followed along with me since, but we had only three kids at the onset of this experiment. During the last month of Simple & Free, Stress, we were matched with Ben and Remy, our two youngest, adopted children from Ethiopia. We brought them home the year after Simple & Free was over. So now we have five kids, and they are such a normal, treasured part of our family now, I cant even remember before. In fact, I felt something close to sadness going back through Simple & Free because Ben and Remy werent here for it. Shared memories before they joined our family are bittersweet, yet still precious, because those years count too, but with the reverse knowledge that our little crew was incomplete. (But Ill tell you right now that Ben Hatmaker would have had exactly none of Food Month. Hed have moved in with my parents. That boy loves food.)
Life has also gotten a bit bigger and more public, which has made it a touch lonelier than I like. And there are certainly way more of you now, but that has been a joy, not a burden. Ive seen more of the world since, too; I got my very first passport during the writing of Simple & Free . Weve been to Africa a dozen times now, and even though I mentioned in the Intro that Id never been to Italy, I literally returned from there two days ago, after taking the trip of a lifetime with Council Members Jenny and Shonna and their husbands. Ive fallen hard for the world, you guys. It is beautiful and marvelous, and it has much to teach us on living simply, living well, living smaller, slowing down. There is nothing like trying to visit a store in Spain around 1:00 p.m . and finding it closed for a siesta until 3:00, the owner having coffee with friends or a nap, lost profits be damned. The world has been my best teacher since the completion of Simple & Free, a continuing education program that awes me.
Other than that, we are still at our beloved Austin New Church. I still have the same friends youll read about. We still retreat at my mom and dads ranch every Thanksgiving. (Oh! One other new development: Dad put a double-wide trailer on the ranch so we are no longer sleeping on forty-year-old sofas in the barn. See Day 26 in the last section. Were fancy now.) We still eat pretty clean except when we dont. We still protect the Sabbath pretty fiercely, although we observe it on Sundays, the only true day of rest in our weird life with our weird schedule. I still live in Buda, Texas, just south of Austin, although we moved into a 1908 farmhouse four minutes away that we remodeled on HGTV, which I dont have time to explain here because what in the world.
I still love Jesus so much and believe in this life He asked us to live. I think He knew what He was talking about when He told us to not store up too many treasures on this earth but to live well and love well, because as it turns out, that is what matters more than anything. And listen, Jesus has seen us through some suffering in the last seven yearsreal, desperate, unexpected painso I believe Him more than ever. He is exactly who He said He is, and when literally everything you hold dear falls away, Jesus remains. So yeah, Im still all in here.
On Day 15 of Month Four, I wrote: I giggle to imagine what 2017 Jen would come back to teach me; I dont even know what I dont know. I love that I wrote that. I love that I decided to be a lifelong learner who is less attached to certainty and being right and more interested in paying attention and developing. One thing the 2017 Jen would say to the 2010 Jen who originally experienced Simple & Free is this: Number one, use sunscreen. Im serious. You are in your final days of irresponsible sunning with no consequences. But number two, this weirdo little life you are constructing where you follow Jesus to strange places doing bizarre things and taking risks is all worth it. Every day of it. It only gets more exciting and meaningful. When God asks you to do something, do it. He is such a trustworthy leader. Dont be afraid. Youve put all your chips on the right number.