
The Shogun’s Bowl is Broken
Kintsugi: the art of enjoying fragile and impermanent things.
Kintsugi: the art of enjoying fragile and impermanent things.
Leave home, leave the country, leave the familiar. Only then can routine experience—buying bread, eating vegetables, even saying hello—become new…
Why we need the creativity of our contemporaries. Liz HorstLiz Horst studied music and English literature at Grove City College…
You need spaces where you can lose track of time. Liz HorstLiz Horst studied music and English literature at Grove…
The limitation you may sense is not your femininity. It is the limitation of time. Heather Walker PetersonAlong with being…
In a culture increasingly on the move and offering a thousand different ways to get shrink-wrapped stories, reading novels can seem daunting.
This was where time and eternity met and kissed. Jody ByrkettJody Byrkett is the editor of the Pray channel. She…
A poem on Summer’s eclipse. Julie CarmeanJulie Carmean is an educator at the National Gallery of Art. She is also…
The bittersweet beauty, envy of the gods, that “all good things come to an end.” Liz HorstLiz Horst studied music…
How our Western work ethic devalues time and goodness. Liz HorstLiz Horst studied music and English literature at Grove City…