Wabi-Sabi: On Embracing Imperfection

"In traditional Japanese aesthetics, wabi-sabi centers on the acceptance of transience and imperfection." – Wikipedia

It feels especially relevant now in AI-slop days, but I guess that knife could cut both ways.

What I take out of it is that the imperfections of being human, on having opinions and a unique taste, are immeasurably valuable even though machines arguably can deliver more "perfect" solutions.

Of course one could also make the counter argument that machines and their slop is itself the "imperfections", and that those should be embraced. This doesn't sit as well with me, but who am I to judge.

"Wabi-sabi nurtures all that is authentic by acknowledging three simple realities: nothing lasts, nothing is finished, and nothing is perfect."

Kintsugi: Waste not, want not

I also find the Japanese concept of Kintsugi interesting. Kintsugi is a Japanese art of repairing broken pottery, but where the end goal is not to hide the marks from the repair, but rather to embrace them and rather make it an actual visible embellishment.

Sometimes I feel like my kids see me as a cheapskate when I try fixing their broken stuff. Especially if it's fairly low-cost items from the start. Why bother, right? I wonder if kids in Japan naturally have more respect and understanding for this, or if they are also hit by the wave of consumption-first attitudes of the newer generations. As much as I find it important to teach my kids the value of fixing stuff, I am also aware of how mean kids can be to each other and that the concept of Kintsugi is not exactly ingrained in my kids' culture.

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