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February 19, 2006
Return to the Slow Life
Just in thinking again about our last lecture, I came across a blog entry (sojamo)linking to an older blog entry (imomus)about the Slow life movement in Japan with the Slow Life manifesto.
I think these things are what I would consider elements of a higher quality of life, if only I could afford to practice them.
The practice of the "Slow Life" involves the following eight themes:SLOW PACE: We value the culture of walking, to be fit and to reduce traffic accidents.
SLOW WEAR: We respect and cherish our beautiful traditional costumes, including woven and dyed fabrics, Japanese kimonos and Japanese night robes (yukata).
SLOW FOOD: We enjoy Japanese food culture, such as Japanese dishes and tea ceremony, and safe local ingredients.
SLOW HOUSE: We respect houses built with wood, bamboo, and paper, lasting over one hundred or two hundred years, and are careful to make things durably, and ultimately, to conserve our environment.
SLOW INDUSTRY: We take care of our forests, through our agriculture and forestry, conduct sustainable farming with human labor, and ultimately spread urban farms and green tourism.
SLOW EDUCATION: We pay less attention to academic achievement, and create a society in which people can enjoy arts, hobbies, and sports throughout our lifetimes, and where all generations can communicate well with each other.
SLOW AGING: We aim to age with grace and be self-reliant throughout our lifetimes.
SLOW LIFE: Based on the philosophy of life stated above, we live our lives with nature and the seasons, saving our resources and energy.
Posted by lrw at February 19, 2006 03:05 PM
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Comments
i feel what john maeda is trying with SIMPLICITY has same tendency with the slow life movement in some way.
http://weblogs.media.mit.edu/SIMPLICITY/
Posted by: sawako at February 21, 2006 08:23 PM