Description
Perfectly imperfect. Broken and beautiful. Shattered and strong. She picks up the pieces of her life, time and time again, continues moving on. Nothing can stop a soul who seeks strives searches for passion and purpose. A soul willing to overcome rebuild restart. Knowing the way in which she lives her life is truly her greatest art. Sara bares her soul, reveals her pain, shows her strength. In doing so, she allows you to do the same.
Sara Kinstsukuroi
"Kintsukuroi, which means golden repair in Japanese, is the Japanese art of mending pottery or ceramics. It is achieved by mending the areas of breakage with lacquer dusted or mixed with powdered gold, silver, or platinum. The underlying philosophy of kintsukuroi is that breakage and repair are treated as part of the natural history of an object, instead of something that must be disguised. The philosophy of kinsukuroi comes from the Japanese philosophy wabi-sabi. Wabi-sabi is a worldview that teaches an individual to embrace the flawed and imperfect. It confers with the Buddhist teaching of the three marks of existence. These are impermanence, suffering, and emptiness. The philosophy is based around the acceptance of the transient and imperfect. The goal is to develop a more heightened idea of beauty where people look much further beyond the surface beauty of an object. In traditional Japanese aesthetics, kinsukuroi embraces properties of roughness, asymmetry, simplicity, intimacy, and austerity."