You have tried adding more: more plans, more storage, more tips for getting everything under control. Yet home still feels tense, cluttered or fragile. The Tao of Less invites you to subtract instead. Drawing on Laozi's Taoist wisdom, it shows how to live with taoist simple living in ordinary flats, family houses and shared spaces, using soft, well-placed actions rather than constant pushing. This is a down-to-earth guide to wu wei everyday life: effortless action translated into how you speak, tidy, plan your week and handle conflict. You will learn how soft power at home works, why yielding often beats arguing, and how to design rooms and routines that quietly support you. Along the way, you will experiment with gentle productivity methods, small acts of speech restraint practice, and stillness meditation drills that fit between emails and the school run. Rooted in minimalist home philosophy, the book also explores money, status and sufficiency, helping you lean into a more frugal mindful lifestyle without harsh rules. It is written for people who are weary of self-improvement but still sense that life could feel lighter: parents, professionals, carers and anyone sharing a home with others or navigating it alone. The Tao of Less will not ask you to withdraw from the world. It will help you participate more gracefully in it, with fewer fights against yourself, your loved ones and the shape of your days.
The Tao of Less
SKU: 9789376559572
$23.99 Regular Price
$19.10Sale Price
- Hanae Tsukari writes about gentle, sustainable ways of living in a restless world. Her work circles around a few enduring questions: How much is enough? What actually makes a day feel worth living? And how can ancient insights travel faithfully into small, modern spaces? Over the years, she has experimented with Taoist and other contemplative ideas not in retreat centres, but in rented flats, shared houses and ordinary offices. Friends and readers know her for a quietly practical style: fewer slogans, more experiments that real people can try between school runs and deadlines. Growing up with stories of old Chinese sages and Japanese household customs, Hanae was struck by how much wisdom was embedded in simple gestures: how a room was entered, tea was poured, or a season was welcomed. That thread runs through this book. She is less interested in being an expert than in being a careful companion, inviting readers to notice where pushing has stopped working and where a softer path might be available, right where they already live.


















