What is Wabi-Sabi?
This is amazing. I wish there was a word for it in English. Celebrating the cracked, the odd, the imperfect. I think we all have a sort of wabi-sabi life don't we? No one is perfect, no one has come through life without some sort of scars, but it should be celebrated, and not hidden away.
"Wabi-sabi is the Japanese idea of embracing the imperfect, of celebrating the
worn, the cracked, the patinaed, both as a decorative concept and a
spiritual one — it's an acceptance of the toll that life takes on us
all. As I wrote about it earlier this year, "If we can learn to love the
things that already exist, for all their chips and cracks, their
patinas, their crooked lines or tactile evidence of being made by
someone's hands instead of a machine, from being made from natural
materials that vary rather than perfect plastic, we wouldn't need to
make new stuff, reducing our consumption (and its concurrent energy use
and inevitable waste), cutting our budgets, and saving some great
stories for future generations." We might also be less stressed, and
more attentive to the details, which are the keys to mindfulness."
From this article.