How to Create Sanctuary at Home (Without Making It a Project)
A reflection on pace, routine, and the small shifts that clear the mind.
When I launched my new business last summer, I had one intention: to create sanctuary through my work — the Reflection Room, a calm space for reflection, offered online and in-person.
Then someone asked, “How can sanctuary happen at home?”
My answer now: “It starts with intention and attention.”
For me, sanctuary can absolutely include décor. Beauty matters. Form, shape, color, light — I feel it immediately.
And sanctuary is also attention.
Real life isn’t always a perfectly designed room — at least not for me. I make clutter fast. So for now, I create sanctuary in my everyday living area with small choices that change the atmosphere.
Here are a few that work for me:
- Clear one surface first (dining table or desk): papers out, dishes out, wiped down
- Water or tea (something warm helps)
- Headphones
- A quiet corner (even if it’s just one chair)
- Notebook and pen
- Comfortable clothing
- Dim light
- Notifications off
- Log out of email
- Inbox zero
- Turn on “Color Filters” on my phone
A small action is enough.
Clutter tells the truth
I love simplicity.
I don’t own much, but when one surface gets busy, my brain gets busy too. My mental noise gets quieter when my desk is clear — or when my surroundings are clear.
And sometimes it’s the reverse. When I start seeing clutter build up, it’s usually a sign that something is a bit off, such as my routine is off, my pace is off, or I’m carrying too much.
Either way, clutter gives information.
Some mornings I wake up thinking:
“Phew… where do I even start?”
On those days, I tell myself:
- “One thing at a time.”
- “One step at a time.”
- “One breath at a time.”
Then I start by clearing one surface or picking up one task.
One cleared surface. One small reset. Even that can shift the day.
A small luxury that changes the atmosphere

Lately, I’ve returned to one small ritual: sayu — simple hot water — boiled in a tetsubin (南部鉄瓶 / Nambu iron kettle).
I love the form, the color, the steam rising. It feels like a small luxury.
Quiet. Steady. Real.
Small shift. Big difference — like the photo above.
🌿 Honest note: this picture is more composed than real life.
I moved things. I hid clutter outside the frame. I admire homes that look effortlessly organized… but that’s not my (or my family’s) reality.
Movement clears a different kind of clutter
Clutter isn’t only visual. Sometimes, not moving the body creates a different kind of clutter — mental fog, stuckness, and that heavy “I can’t start” feeling.
I’ve signed up for many gyms over the years. I wasn’t very consistent.
But this past year, I joined Curves after a colleague recommended it, and I’ve been going much more regularly than in many previous attempts.
One thing I’ve noticed about myself:
After a monthly check-in, the staff asks, “How often will you come this month?”
And after each workout, they ask, “When will you come next time?”
I answer without thinking.
“I’ll come three times a week.”
“I’ll come tomorrow.”
It’s not that I’m trying to lie. I just say it, and I don’t always mean it. But I know this for sure.
If I go — even once — my mind changes.
Ideas come up. I can see the next move, and I feel better.
Sanctuary can be created both inside and outside
- clearing one surface
- a warm cup of tea or sayu
- 30 minutes of movement
- a small conversation that softens your day
- a message that lands at the right time
A small experiment for this week
If you want something practical, here’s a simple experiment:
- Clear one surface (desk or dining table)
- Make something warm (tea, hot water)
- Move your body for 30 minutes (walk, stretch, anything)
- Lower stimulation (dim light, notifications off, turn on color filters on your phone)
- Write one sentence: “What’s true right now?”
- Then: “What matters most today?”
These are ideas I still forget. But it’s always nice to come back to them, because they work for me.
Some days they’re not as effective. And, that’s okay.
A question for quiet leaders and visionaries
💠 What helps you create sanctuary — inside or outside — without making it a big project?
If you’re living in Japan and want a calm space to think clearly, this is exactly why I created the Reflection Room — offered in-person and online.
About the Author
Chie Sawa is the founder of Thrive Life Design — a sanctuary for quiet, introspective leaders and visionaries in Japan.
Drawing from decades of experience in psychology and reflective practice, she now offers The Reflection Room, a non-clinical space for one-on-one conversations and intuitive tarot readings that help thoughtful professionals realign with clarity, confidence, and calm purpose.
