There’s a word you won’t find in a dictionary, but you’ll feel it the moment you walk into a home that works: soroms .
Then listen. Move one thing. Light a candle. Open a window. And watch a space become a sorom . Drop a comment below — or tell me the one room you’ve been avoiding. Let’s fix it together. Need more small, soulful changes? Subscribe for weekly “soroms” stories.
That chipped mug holding pens. The rug your dog loves. A bookshelf stuffed two layers deep. Soroms celebrates the worn-in, the well-loved, the so-this-is-us details.
“So, room… what do you want to be?”
In a world of cookie-cutter catalogs and algorithm-driven decor, soroms is a quiet rebellion. It’s the pause between buying another “trendy” piece and actually listening to your four walls. A sorom isn’t just decorated — it’s inhabited. Here’s how to spot one:
It’s not about square footage or a designer label. Soroms (pronounced so-rooms ) is the art of looking at a space and saying, “So… this room. What does it need to feel like me?”