I spent much of my weekend showing houses to buyers. Every time I do this, it’s always the same experience for me. I wonder why anybody with the slightest understanding of aesthetics would have built such houses — and why anybody would buy them.
I’m in the minority on this, of course, because almost everybody buys whatever is popular among his friends and family. They don’t know any better. They buy what they know. They buy what seems “normal” to them. So they buy houses which are painfully garish or pretentious or dull to me. And builders keep building those sorts of houses — simply because that’s what people expect to buy.
When I’m showing such a house — and people are talking about borrowing half a million dollars to buy it — I want to ask them if this is what they really want. I want to ask them if they’ve ever considered the warmly beautiful piece of living art they could build for that money instead. I want to show them houses such as this one on the market right now in Redlands, Calif.
But I don’t — because I remember how ignorant I was about design philosophy before I finally learned to appreciate good architecture, too. They wouldn’t appreciate my suggestion any more than I would have appreciated it back when I wanted something which I would loathe today.

Film hurts when I hear, ‘I’ve seen what we can be like together’
I’ve been sent to Facebook jail — and nothing about it makes sense
Nature made me like my mother, but my father tried to erase that
Taking a break from Facebook is a step to retake control over my life
Eviction moratorium is pure theft; it’s a sign of creeping socialism
Patterns that made old mistakes keep us making same old errors
We frequently go back to the past hoping to find a different future
Very few things warm my heart and fill me with joy like babies