Designing digital products that embrace change, evolution, and eventual obsolescence as features rather than failures.
The Japanese aesthetic principle of mono no aware, which Murasaki exemplified, celebrates the beauty inherent in transience. Unlike permanence-seeking Silicon Valley culture, this Sophos tradition invites digital creatives to design with impermanence in mind. A product or platform might be designed to evolve, sunset, or transform. Content created today acknowledges its future irrelevance. Interfaces acknowledge their seasonal nature. This is not about planned obsolescence but about honest relationship with time. It invites users into a collaborative acceptance of change rather than false promises of eternal solutions. This approach paradoxically creates more authentic engagement: users feel the integrity of work created with full knowledge of its temporary nature. For the digital creative life, embracing impermanence liberates you from the exhausting pursuit of permanent solutions and instead focuses energy on creating genuine beauty within inevitable cycles of creation and dissolution.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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