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"I just don't have good taste." Have you ever said that and given up on choosing something you actually liked?
Picking out clothes. Decorating a room. Choosing a gift for someone. You envy those women who seem to have natural taste, and quietly decide you don't.
But maybe that's just a story you've been telling yourself.

Open social media and beautiful rooms are everywhere. Magazines line up this year's trends.
It's easy to start comparing. She has taste. I don't.
But stop for a moment. Who decided what "good taste" means? Following trends? Choosing expensive things?
Probably none of that.

Have you ever stopped in front of a flower shop without meaning to? You're no expert on flowers. But something about it just looked lovely.
That "lovely" — that is taste.
Taste isn't the ability to pick the right thing. It's the ability to notice what resonates with you. And everyone has that.
Maybe you've just been too busy to listen to it.

You tried copying a popular interior style. But something felt off. Maybe you've been there.
That's not because you lack taste. It's because your "I like this" and someone else's "I like this" are simply different.
Things chosen by someone else's standards always feel a bit borrowed. Things chosen by your own feeling, even if no one else understands — they fit. Naturally.
You don't have to match. Choose what you like.

This isn't about sharpening your taste. Or training it.
Just start noticing. That colour on the cafe wall. A poster you walked past. A friend's phone case. Those little "oh, that's nice" moments in your day.
Collect them, and the shape of what you love starts to appear. That becomes your taste. Yours alone.
It's not hard. Just notice.

Stop saying you have no taste. If something has ever moved you — that's enough.
Forget someone else's idea of correct. Choose by your own "I like this." Just that, and your life fills with colours that belong only to you.
You don't need a reason to like something.
"I don't know why. But I like it."
And that's more than enough!
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Writer "I don't know why. But I like it." — Delivering encounters with art, chosen by feeling. |