Your home looks fine and feels wrong.
Let's fix the second part.
Rooms hold routines.
The desk facing the wall, the chair no one sits in, the kitchen arranged for a life you stopped living two years ago — your space quietly votes for the old version of you every single day.
I've restarted my life more times — new cities, new countries, new careers — and every restart taught me the same thing: rooms have to change with you, or they'll pull you backward.
Forty years of being in the design field later, I can tell you it's not magic and it's not money.
It's arrangement.
And it's learnable.
Not "presentable." Not "done." Loved.
The book is called How to Love Every Room in Your House because that's the actual standard — rooms you walk into and exhale.
Not a magazine spread. Not someone else's aesthetic.
Yours, working.
The Cabana System is the guidance that gets you there: why light, color, and arrangement change how a room feels, and a room-by-room method for fixing yours.
One room at a time, starting with the one that bothers you most.