As I contemplated my first blog post I wasn’t sure where to start. I wanted to weave my personal history into how I became an interior designer. Then it hit me.
In 1992, I lived in Suwa, Nagano Prefecture in Japan, with my sweet husband Peter. Suwa was a beautiful mountain town on a lake, with hot springs, a castle and amazing people. Tradition was a part of every aspect of life. Even though nearly no one there spoke much English, I still felt warmth and community. There was a harmony that made it easy for me, as a foreigner, to live there.
Luckily for me, I got a job teaching English, and I loved it! I made friends with many of those who I was teaching, but I felt more like their student. They taught me a different kind of patience and kindness, and to think of the common good before yourself. Additionally, and maybe most importantly, I saw how to truly respect my elders’ knowledge from life experiences and how passionate the older generation was to share it with younger.
Living in Japan I felt calmness, a deep sense of history, and connection with nature, but I could not exactly place why I felt this so strongly.
“Wabi-sabi” is a Japanese term that essentially means finding beauty in imperfection. Wabi refers to living with humility, simplicity and in harmony with nature. Sabi is defined as the ability to accept the lifecycle of anything as it is—flaws and all.
As an interior design student, I learned the concept of Wabi-sabi in design. I realized that I had experienced the feeling and loved this concept while living in Japan without ever knowing the name for it.
The calmness, the order, scale, the love of nature and history spoke to me long before I was an interior designer. This concept had become a part of me in my subconscious.
Luckily for me, I got a job teaching English, and I loved it! I made friends with many of those who I was teaching, but I felt more like their student. They taught me a different kind of patience and kindness, and to think of the common good before yourself. Additionally, and maybe most importantly, I saw how to truly respect my elders’ knowledge from life experiences and how passionate the older generation was to share it with younger.
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