IMAGINE Magazine Imagine-Fall 2018-JOOMAG | Page 30

death spiral? No. We toss them. They served us; now they don’t. On the other hand, some of us bind their stems, hang them upside down to dry and repurpose them as potpourri. It’s in that quiet transition from vibrant bouquet to dying roses that we can appreciate the beauty of their imperfection and maybe our own. That appreciation, that mindful awakening is wabi sabi. In his book, Wabi Sabi: The Japa- nese Art of Impermanence, Andrew Juniper says, “Wabi sabi’s influence on Japanese aesthetic values has inspired such arts as the tea ceremo- ny, flower arranging, haiku, garden design and Noh (ancient) theater. It offers an aesthetic ideal that uses the uncompromising touch of mortality to focus the mind on the exquisite transient beauty to be found in all things impermanent.” These days it is easy to become entranced by the shiny new object. We love our gadgets, our cool tech stuff. Carpet cleaning robot? Bring it! Wabi sabi is 180 degrees in the other direction. Walk through an antique shop. Find an old worn table. Look for nicks and weathered areas where per- haps elbows rested generation after generation, where robust conversa- tions and peels of laughter forged new friendships and loving family celebrations late into the night. You can feel the subtly undulating surface and imagine when life stopped for a while and the table provided that place of connection. There is a soulful residue in cer- tain old things where aging suggests that the thing itself in all its imper- fection emanates an indescriblable intrinsic grace. It speaks to us, and if we are listening, opens us to see- 30 IMAGINE l FALL 2018 ing the beauty in all things. Maybe that’s why we both love the natural vibrance of fall colors and experi- ence the sadness of the leaves falling and winter approaching. A touch of melancholy is wabi sabi too. The recognition of imperma- nence, some will tell you, is a free- ing experience. It gives us options in its raw truth. For Buddhists it is an essential contemplation to prepare for the next life. Seeing the beauty in imperfection around us can become a deeply enriching practice of mind- fulness and can release us from the searching and grasping to the next passing pleasure. Wabi sabi can open our eyes, slow us down, and awaken us to a new appreciation of the extraordinary tapestry of experi- ences that is our life. It can naturally take us to new depths of inner peace by seeing things just as they are, and relaxing in that truth. Wib Middleton is a professional photographer and writer who explores the wabi sabi aesthetic as a way to express the beauty of impermanence. Whether it’s a fading rose or an old factory door, his images remind us of the ephemeral nature of all things. For more examples of his wabi sabi imagery, go to wibmiddletonphotography.com