4.8 • 2K Ratings
🗓️ 28 August 2018
⏱️ 105 minutes
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In Japanese culture, if an object of value breaks, there is an art form that involves putting it back together with lacquer and golden powder – Kintsugi, or the art of golden repair.
The repaired object is then considered more beautiful than it was before; a recognition that the imperfections and differences are part of our story, and part of what makes us attractive.
There is another Japanese art called wabi-sabi, which is essentially the aesthetic philosophy that things can be perfectly imperfect.
As someone who wrecked his life and put it back together, I can appreciate the metaphor.
I also appreciate how these traditions inspire my guest Candice Kumai, the “golden girl of the wellness world.” She is a professionally trained chef, a leading wellness writer, a best-selling author, a Top Chef alumni, and a proud Japanese-American.
Her newest book, Kintsugi Wellness: The Japanese Art of Nourishing Mind, Body, and Spirit, is more than just a clean living guide or cookbook – it’s a piece of art that guides the reader through Candice’s favorite Japanese traditions and practices for cultivating inner strength and living graciously, containing the tools we all need to reclaim the art of living well.
Candice reminds us of the power and beauty of rebirth, shows us we can all start practicing the art of living well (no matter what age we are), and explains why cooking is one of the only resources available to all of us that will allow someone to change their whole life through simple ingredients & actions.
We also end the interview with a question I’ll pose to all of you – How can we, as public figures and content creators, be of better use to you? That’s why we’re here, and we honestly want to know.
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0:00.0 | The Lifestylist, Episode 159, featuring Candice Kumai. |
0:06.4 | I'm Luke Story, a former celebrity fashion stylist and founder of School of Style. |
0:26.9 | For the past 20 years, I've been relentlessly dedicated to my deepest passion, designing the ultimate lifestyle based on the most powerful principles of health and spirituality. |
0:38.3 | The Lifestyleist podcast is a show dedicated to sharing my discoveries |
0:42.2 | and the experts behind them with you. |
0:51.2 | Candice Kumai, the Lady of the Hour, |
1:12.1 | she's an internationally renowned wellness writer, chef, and content creator, described as L Magazine as the golden girl of the wellness world. And I would have to agree. Actually, she is kind of golden, you know, at least her skin on the outside. And after this interview, I think you'll believe and agree with me that she's golden on the inside too. There you go. She's the host of Wabi Sabi, the perfectly imperfect podcast, of which I'm a |
1:19.4 | fan. She's also the author of Kinsugi Wellness, the Japanese art of nourishing mind, body, and spirit. |
1:25.9 | I've got a copy of that in my kitchen as we speak. |
1:28.2 | And if I ever learn how to cook one day, I might just open it up and give it a shot. |
1:33.7 | So Candice brings me some incredible macha cookies. The recipe for them, in fact, are on her |
1:40.5 | YouTube channel if you want to check it out. I downed them all, got a complete sugar rush, |
1:44.6 | was probably a total spaz in this interview, but the basics of this talk are this. In Japanese |
1:52.1 | culture, if an object of value breaks, there's an art form that involves putting it back together |
1:58.5 | with lacquer and golden power. It's called |
2:00.8 | Kinsugi, or the art of golden repair. The repaired object is then considered more beautiful than |
2:07.6 | it was before. A recognition that imperfections and differences are part of our story and part of what |
2:14.2 | makes us attractive. There's also another Japanese art called Wabi Sabi, which I just love that name, |
2:20.7 | which is essentially the aesthetic philosophy that things can be perfectly imperfect. |
2:25.5 | And as someone who has wrecked his life multiple times and put it back together a few, |
2:30.4 | I can appreciate the metaphor. |
2:32.5 | Here's what we talk about in this conversation with Candice. |
... |
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