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The music made her more desperate than ever to do, invent, create — to channel all her own energies into the making of something beautiful and unique to herself — but it also made her want to love. To submit to the loving of someone so deeply and well that there could be no question as to whether she were squandering her life, for what could be nobler than dedicating it to the happiness and fulfillment of another?
Lisa Halliday, Asymmetry
COMME des GARÇONS HOMME PLUS displaced cut cardigan
A/W 2020
Circles of Life
Running in circles is often a criticism – a metaphor for going nowhere fast. But spiralling or chiral movement may be an effective way of cautiously exploring an environment, especially if you’re a bacterium. Here a throng of cyanobacteria – the oldest living organism on Earth – glide in and out of a droplet of water. While appearing chaotic at first, the bacteria inside the droplet stretch out like holidaymakers in a jacuzzi (although ~3000 times smaller), while cells leaving the water begin to bend, turning in a clockwise direction until they find water again. Differences in velocity between the 'head' and 'tail' of the bacteria yield this natural curve to the right. Such studies of chirality in ancient organisms may yield insights to asymmetry in other types of bacteria, but also in understanding, and tackling cyanobacteria in harmful algal blooms.
Written by John Ankers
Video from work by Andrej Vilfan and colleagues
Laboratory for Fluid Physics, Pattern Formation and Biocomplexity (LFPB), Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Göttingen, Germany
Video originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (PNAS), February 2026
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Summer arrives in a strawberry, sweet, juicy. As long as you feel its flesh on your tongue you’re unaware how. One minute inches into the next. But how could you observe awareness anyway? Or, for that matter, a thought? It grows in you, not as a sensation. (Nor like a baby or tumor.) An experience that you can’t hold on to. Any more than to the smell of lilac. Though it soothes emptiness.
Rosmarie Waldrop, from “Asymmetry (2)”, The Nick of Time: Poems
Hi, I hope you’re having a lovely day. I’ve binged all your fics and asymmetry has had me in a chokehold for days. I can imagine rin’s feelings towards his soulmate are quite complex but would love to hear more about it from you. Is he only interested in her now because his brother is or is there something more going on? Why are they so adamant on keeping her close while not showing her any signs of caring beside threatening people in her life. Would love to hear anything more you have about these two. Sorry if that wasn’t straightforward! First time asking and kinda nervous :)
i wouldn't say he's jumping for joy at the thought of sharing his soulmate with his brother, but he's probably the only soul on earth he'd suffer touching her. that's been a constant from the start.
so it's not jealousy, at least where ran's concerned.
point blank, he doesn't want a soulmate. he enjoys the life he has, fucking who he wants, hurting who he wants, flying high on whatever premium grade drugs he can get his hands on, crashing hard and doing it all over again the next day.
and when he meets her, he isn't impressed. doesn't want a ball and chain dragging after him for the rest of his life, always bitching and moaning and crying about him not giving her attention or some other bullshit. she's not cut out for him or this life.
unfortunately for him, soulmates don't work that way <3
but just cuz he doesn't wanna play with his toy right now doesn't mean he's okay with anyone else touching it.
04/15/25
The Philosophy of Fukinsei (不均斉)
Fukinsei (不均斉) is a Japanese aesthetic and philosophical principle meaning "asymmetry," "imbalance," or "irregularity." It's one of the core concepts in traditional Japanese aesthetics, particularly associated with Zen Buddhism and expressed through arts like tea ceremony, garden design, flower arrangement (ikebana), and pottery.
Core meaning: Fukinsei values asymmetry, unevenness, and deliberate avoidance of perfect balance or regularity. It finds beauty in what's off-center, irregular, and naturally imperfect—rejecting the Western classical ideal of symmetry, proportion, and geometric perfection.
Philosophical foundations:
Natural authenticity: Nature rarely produces perfect symmetry or geometric regularity. Mountains aren't symmetrical, rivers don't flow in straight lines, trees grow irregularly. Fukinsei aligns human creation with natural patterns, suggesting that artificial perfection is lifeless while asymmetry captures organic vitality.
This connects to broader Japanese aesthetic values like wabi-sabi (beauty in imperfection and impermanence) and finding profundity in natural simplicity rather than ornate artifice.
Zen Buddhist influence: Zen emphasizes direct experience of reality beyond conceptual categories and rigid forms. Perfect symmetry represents mental construction, intellectual control, ego's attempt to impose order. Asymmetry expresses spontaneity, naturalness, freedom from rigid thinking.
The famous Zen circle (ensō) is often deliberately imperfect—the brushstroke doesn't quite close or shows variation in thickness. This "imperfection" points beyond the form to the living moment of creation and the reality that transcends perfect abstractions.
Dynamic tension: Perfect symmetry creates static balance—nothing moves, everything's resolved. Asymmetry creates dynamic tension, implies movement and continuation beyond the frame. Your eye travels through the composition seeking balance rather than resting in achieved equilibrium. This reflects reality as process, becoming, never-finished rather than complete stasis.
Aesthetic applications:
Tea ceremony: The tea room (chashitsu) deliberately avoids symmetry. The alcove (tokonoma) is off-center, the entrance requires bending (asymmetrical approach), utensils are placed irregularly. Even the tea bowl is often asymmetrical, irregular in shape, encouraging attention to its unique character rather than conformity to ideal form.
Garden design: Japanese gardens avoid central focal points, straight paths, or symmetrical layouts. Elements are placed to create asymmetrical but harmonious compositions. The famous rock garden at Ryōan-ji arranges fifteen rocks so you can never see all of them simultaneously from any single vantage point—resisting completion and total comprehension.
Ikebana (flower arrangement): Uses odd numbers of elements (3, 5, 7 rather than even pairs), creates triangular asymmetrical compositions, emphasizes negative space, and celebrates branches that curve irregularly rather than growing straight. The arrangement suggests natural growth rather than artificial decoration.
Pottery and ceramics: Traditional Japanese pottery often features irregular forms, asymmetrical glazing, deliberate imperfections. A tea bowl might lean slightly, have uneven thickness, show where the potter's hand shaped it. These "flaws" are valued as signs of human touch and natural process.
Architecture: Traditional Japanese buildings use asymmetrical layouts, irregular spacing of columns, varied roof angles. Even in contemporary architecture, Japanese designers often avoid perfect symmetry in favor of dynamic imbalance.
Deeper philosophical dimensions:
Resistance to totalization: Perfect symmetry suggests completeness, totality, nothing left unsaid. Asymmetry implies incompleteness, openness, the partial view that acknowledges you can't capture everything. This connects to epistemological humility—rejecting claims to total knowledge or comprehensive systems.
Invitation to participation: Symmetrical, balanced compositions are self-contained—the viewer observes but isn't needed. Asymmetrical compositions invite the viewer to complete or balance them mentally, creating active engagement rather than passive reception. The artwork doesn't exist fully without the viewer's participation.
Avoiding dualism: Western thought often works through binary oppositions resolved in perfect balance or synthesis. Fukinsei suggests reality doesn't resolve into neat balances but exists in productive tension, dynamic imbalance that generates rather than resolves.
Temporal dimension: Asymmetry suggests change and temporality. Perfect balance seems eternal, outside time. Imbalance implies before and after, movement from here to there, the moment captured in process rather than frozen in completion.
Philosophical contrasts with Western aesthetics:
Greek classical ideals: Classical Western aesthetics (from Vitruvius through Renaissance) valorized symmetry, proportion, mathematical harmony—the golden ratio, bilateral symmetry, geometric perfection. The Parthenon, Leonardo's Vitruvian Man, classical music's balanced phrases all exemplify this.
These represent reason imposing order on chaos, mind mastering matter, divine perfection manifested in material form. Beauty reflects eternal mathematical truths.
Fukinsei rejects this: Beauty emerges not from conformity to abstract ideal but from particularity, irregularity, the unrepeatable moment. The asymmetrical tea bowl is beautiful precisely because it's this unique object, not because it approximates some Platonic form of bowls.
Romantic organicism: Western Romanticism did celebrate organic irregularity over classical formality—picturesque landscapes, Gothic asymmetry, natural sublimity. This shares something with fukinsei but tends toward dramatic expression, overwhelming scale, emotional intensity. Fukinsei is more understated, subtle, quietly confident rather than dramatically assertive.
Modernist functionalism: "Form follows function" and minimalist grids create different kind of perfection—rational, efficient, universal. Fukinsei's asymmetry isn't functional efficiency but poetic suggestion, meaningful imperfection.
Contemporary relevance:
Design and user experience: Contemporary design sometimes incorporates fukinsei principles—asymmetrical layouts that guide attention, irregular spacing that feels organic, deliberate imperfection that humanizes digital interfaces. Though often this gets superficialized as merely "looking Japanese" rather than embodying the philosophy.
Anti-perfectionism: In an age of Instagram perfection, photoshop idealization, and algorithmic optimization, fukinsei offers philosophical resources for valuing imperfection, embracing irregularity, resisting the pressure for flawless presentation.
Ecological thinking: Fukinsei's alignment with natural patterns resonates with contemporary environmental consciousness—working with rather than against natural irregularity, finding beauty in organic processes rather than imposing geometric control.
Critiques and complications:
Calculated spontaneity: There's a paradox in deliberately creating asymmetry. Zen masters spend years learning to paint the "spontaneous" brushstroke. Tea ceremony masters carefully place objects to appear casually arranged. Is this genuine naturalness or highly sophisticated artifice pretending to be natural?
The philosophical response might be that it's both—cultivating capacity for genuine spontaneity through discipline, allowing naturalness to emerge through practice rather than forcing it.
Cultural appropriation: Western adoption of fukinsei sometimes reduces it to superficial style—"add some asymmetry for Japanese flair"—without understanding the philosophical depth or cultural context. The principle becomes decorative technique rather than ontological and aesthetic worldview.
Privilege and refinement: Appreciating subtle asymmetry, finding beauty in restrained irregularity requires cultivated aesthetic sensibility. Is fukinsei aristocratic refinement accessible only to those with leisure to develop such sensitivity? Or can it inform more democratic, everyday aesthetic experience?
Related Japanese aesthetic concepts:
Fukinsei works within constellation of related principles:
Kanso (簡素): Simplicity, elimination of clutter
Koko (考古): Basic, weathered, aged character
Shizen (自然): Naturalness, absence of pretense
Yugen (幽玄): Profound mystery, subtle depth
Datsuzoku (脱俗): Freedom from convention
Seijaku (静寂): Tranquility, stillness
Together these form coherent aesthetic philosophy valuing suggestion over statement, impermanence over permanence, natural irregularity over imposed order.
Philosophical questions fukinsei raises:
Is beauty objective or cultural? Western classical aesthetics often claimed symmetry and proportion were objectively beautiful, grounded in mathematical harmony. Fukinsei suggests beauty is culturally variable—what seems perfectly balanced to one culture feels static and lifeless to another.
What is perfection? Is perfection the flawless realization of ideal form, or is true perfection found in authentic imperfection? Does the concept of perfection itself trap us in unhelpful abstractions?
How should we relate to nature? Should we impose geometric order on natural materials, or find ways to work with natural irregularity? Is beauty achieved through mastering nature or harmonizing with it?
What is completion? Western thought often seeks closure, resolution, completion. Fukinsei suggests virtue in incompleteness, openness, the unfinished quality that invites continuation.
Practical wisdom:
Beyond aesthetics, fukinsei might inform how we approach life: accepting that things won't be perfectly balanced, finding beauty in irregularity rather than struggling for impossible symmetry, embracing the dynamic tension of imbalance rather than forcing premature resolution.
In relationships, work, creative projects—perhaps wisdom lies not in achieving perfect balance but in working skillfully with asymmetry, finding productive ways to live with imbalance rather than being paralyzed by it.