When it comes to looking at Kintsugi in full, one thing to remember is that this is a form of art with some serious benefits to it. What, though, might you call the benefits of Kintsugi? What can it for us when we want to make sure that we live our best lives?

Nothing is permanently broken

The first benefit of Kintsugi is a life lesson: that in life, we never lose the items that have been broken by us. If you are someone who has a passion for keeping things fracture-free in life, you might find life quite a stressful experience!

Things break, whether that’s a relationship, a friendship, or even just a ceramic object. However, the power of Kintsugiis that it quickly teaches us that, in life, nothing is broken. There is no reason for you to see something being broken as being permanent: if you break something, it can be fixed, it can be repaired.

Learn to act, not to fret

Another useful benefit of learning about Kintsugi is that it soon teaches us about the changing of the way that we think. For example, right now you probably view that broken object as gone, as something that should have been stronger. Well, Kintsugi teaches us to stop looking at it that way; instead of seeing something as broken and thus fretting over it, take action – fix it!

Kintsugi leaves us with a valuable life lesson. You can fix what is broken, if only you act.

Become stronger mentally

When people hear of Kintsugi, they think of the benefit of not having to worry about losing something they love. And that is a major benefit, for sure. The most effective benefit, though, is that with the help of Kintsugi you can quickly learn that you have emerged from something, a serious setback, a negative, and you have found a solution.

Do not just see Kintsugi as a practical solution. When your own ceramic mind falls to the floor and smashes, Kintsugiteaches us that everything – even our minds – can be put back together and survive.

You can survive a fall

A unique and interesting take that you can get from Kintsugi, though, is realising that it shows you that you can survive a fall in life. That ceramic bowl that fell to the floor – you never thought you would use it again. Now? Now it looks more amazing than ever!

You can therefore use Kintsugi as a form of assurance that, in life, you can do something truly remarkable. You don’t have to take a setback or a fall – physical or mental – as the moment that you shatter. Kintsugi shows us that anything can be repaired; it can even be improved.

Never lose something special

The most material benefit of Kintsugi, though, is that you no longer need to watch something that you care about deeply and emotionally smash across the floor. When something has a genuine connection with you and the life that you lead, it’s only natural that you would want to hold onto it in a way that would keep it strong, safe, and secure.

It’s one of the main reasons why we recommend that you look at Kintsugi, really. Out of all the forms of repair out there, it’s the one that does the least work to hide its imperfections. And, as we have spoken about until now, that really is not such a bad thing!

Don’t hide your cracks

Another nice benefit of living a life by the philosophy and thinking that makes Kintsugi so powerful, though, is that you will stop doing so much to hide your own cracks and bumps in life. We all have our own failings in life, and for that reason we all look to find our own ways to plaster those cracks so that the rest of the world cannot see our weakness.

Kintsugi, though, teaches you to show that your cracks are just part of life. We all get cracked; we are all a vase that has fallen to the at least once. As life shows us, though, we often find the means and the nous to get back up and do it all again.

That is what Kintsugi shows us as much as anything: embrace imperfection. Stop trying to put yourself forward to society as someone who is the perfect example of what they ‘should’ be. Kintsugi is all about embracing who you are, the good and the bad.

You cannot make the bad vanish

The other lesson and benefit that you often get from Kintsugi is that it always reminds us that the bad exists. You may have managed to patch up, even improve, the item that was damaged. The cracks, though, still exist; they are still present. Nothing now can ever take them away. Nothing, really, can piece that item back together into the same shape and strength that it was once so proud to show off. Nothing can. Kintsugi, though, shows us that sometimes reversion is not as good as revolution.

It lets us see that instead of trying to revert to the past, we can all benefit from being able to tap into our notion for change. You might not have the ‘perfect’ design that you once did; what you have in your hands, though, is something so much more powerful. Instead, you now hold in your hands something of immense and vitally important capacity: the ability to wear the good and the bad like a badge of honour. If it’s good enough for your bowl or vase, it’s good enough for you.

How, though, does one go about managing a Kintsugi rebuilding experience?

 

 


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