You're exhausted. You've optimized everything. And you're still burning out. What if the answer isn't doing more—but doing less , with more attention? When the author collapsed from burnout at twenty-three, his Japanese mother sent him to live with his grandparents in Yokohama. What he discovered there wasn't a wellness program or a productivity hack. It was a completely different way of structuring daily life—one that turns ordinary routines into restoration, transforms small habits into unshakeable resilience, and replaces the exhausting climb toward "more" with the satisfying depth of "enough." Inside this book, you'll discover: Ikigai – How to find meaning in small daily joys instead of chasing grand purpose Ma and Mizu no Kokoro – The art of intentional pause that defeats reactivity and reclaims your calm Hara Hachi Bu – The 80% eating rule that prevents overeating and extends lifespan Kaizen – Why 1% daily improvements succeed where dramatic transformations fail Wabi-Sabi and Kintsugi – How to honor your scars instead of hiding them Shinrin Yoku – Forest bathing protocols that boost immune function by 53% Ofuro – The 15-minute bath ritual that activates cellular repair This isn't about becoming Japanese. It's about recognizing that some of the most effective solutions to modern burnout, anxiety, and disconnection have been practiced for centuries in a culture that values depth over height, presence over productivity, and sustainable daily practice over unsustainable heroic effort. No dramatic overhauls. No willpower required. Just small, proven practices that compound into a life you don't need to recover from. "The extraordinary is hidden in the ordinary—you just have to know where to look."