Western culture loves perfection. Anything that’s imperfect is rejected or at least offered at a steep discount. When someone asks about a newborn baby, you might hear the cliche, “He has all his fingers and toes.”
In our culture of mass production, we judge quality by how perfectly the widgets pressed out of industrial machinery match each other. It doesn’t matter how boring or soulless or poorly designed a thing is. It’s a quality item if it matches its specifications.
I grew up steeped in that culture of perfection, but the more of life that I experience, the more I’ve found beauty in a kind of imperfection that comes only from brokenness.

‘Do you want to sell sugar water … or do you want to change the world?’
We can’t defeat existing system; we must build better one instead
Is it just coincidence that my surgeries come when I’m alone?
Political corruption led to largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history
Is Paul Krugman serious or is this some kind of weird performance art?
Bride is 89 and the groom is 86,
If we keep waiting for perfection, we’ll always keep traveling alone
Normal days often turn to terror when you live with a narcissist