Japan, an island with finite physical space and resources, has an interest in encouraging thrift. It serves both a cultural purpose, by passing down items that have intrinsic value within a family, and a sustainability one, by limiting the number of items produced using scarce raw materials. But waste can be curbed without the need to create within an object a distinct emotional entity and animating it with self esteem and shame. Sometimes, the souls are said to be mischievous. Rarely are they mean-spirited, but even the sweetest wardrobes can have sour days. As in, "I stubbed my toe on grandma's dresser again, she always does that." The imperative to care for an heirloom becomes in a way a vessel for ancestor worship, as the soul begins to take on a once familiar set of traits.
Each February on the streets of Tokyo, kimono-clad women at the Hari Kuyo festival gently retire their sewing needles into a large block of tofu, symbolically wrapping them in tenderness in their twilight days. The soft pincushion is meant to be a gentle farewell, as well as an overture of appreciation for the needle’s many years of dedicated service in the production of fine clothing. It is also said that this "Festival of Broken Needles" reflects the quiet stoicism with which Japanese housewives carry their own burdens. A sewing needle may be the single visual focal point of a lifetime of sorrow, silent sadness put to use through household chores. When a needle breaks, it is not just a broken tool, but a wounded friend deserving of a memorial service.
But not all damaged things are retired.
The art of kintsukuroi, where broken pottery is mended with gold, provides a conspicuous reminder that a bowl has been given a new life. Made more valuable for having been given another chance, both the damage, and the repair, weave additional dimensions into the story of a simple dish. The veins of gold are a stark reminder that the bowl has a life, a history, and a memory.