Tag Archive: zen


Perfect Days directed by Wim Wenders (Japan/Germany, 2023)

Up until now, my favourite toilet cleaner in popular culture has been Raymond Briggs’ ‘Gentleman Jim’, a cartoon character from 1980 who dreamt of breaking out of his humdrum existence and dead end job. In stark contrast, the character of Hirayama in ‘Perfect Days’, played brilliantly by Kōji Yakusho, is more than content to follow a daily routine that borders on a zen-like ritual as an employee of a Tokyo toilet cleaning company.

It helps that the facilities he works in are in a series of incredible buildings commissioned by the Nippon Foundation in 2018. This unique architectural project was coordinated by Yamada Akiko who set out to counter the image of public toilets as “dark, dirty, smelly and scary” places that were best avoided Through unfortunate timing, these buildings were completed around the time that the pandemic struck. Post lockdown, the esteemed German filmmaker Wim Wenders was asked if would be interested in making a documentary to publicise this enlightened initiative. He leapt at the chance but happily decided to turn the film into a work of fiction.

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WHY IT’S OK NOT TO BE OPTIMISTIC

happy sadI’ve let this blog lapse a little of late and my early resolution for 2015 is to post more regularly.

Thanks for those followers and passers-by (whoever you are) for dropping in if only for a brief encounter.

I’m constantly (and often desperately) seeking reasons for optimism and in a period when consumerism is celebrated as though happiness can be bought this is particularly hard.  I was happy therefore to stumble on a moment of Zen here from Eco-philosopher and translator Joanna Macy on how Rainer Maria Rilke can help us embrace our mortality and be more fully alive:

“It’s OK not to be optimistic. …….. feeling that you have to maintain hope can wear you out, so just be present… the biggest gift you can give is to be absolutely present, and when you’re worrying about whether you’re hopeful or hopeless or pessimistic or optimistic, who cares? The main thing is that you’re showing up, that you’re here, and that you’re finding ever more capacity to love this world”.

Season’s greetings to all with the courage to show up!

FLOW by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (Harper Collins, 1991)

This is not a self-help book but readers should gain some modicum of enlightenment from a study of the psychology of optimal experience.

In layman’s terms the Hungarian psychologist (who works in California) sets out to discover what makes humans feel happy and fulfilled. A definite plus from his findings is that this a life skill that can be enjoyed by anyone since “money, power, status and possessions do not, by themselves, necessarily add one iota to the quality of life”.

Anecdotal evidence to substantiate this is provided by surgeons, musicians or chess players but the theory is deemed to be equally applicable to all walks of life including plumbers or mechanics. More than once I was reminded of Pirsig’s Zen & the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance which covers similar territory in more poetic terms. Continue reading

THE POWER OF NOW: A GUIDE TO SPIRITUAL ENLIGHTENMENT by Eckhart Tolle (New World Library, 2004)

A book like this wouldn’t have become such a best seller without it containing a modicum of truth and wisdom.

Ekhart Tolle has won high-profile fans in the form Oprah Winfey, Jim Carey and Meg Ryan as well as hundreds of enthusiastic endorsements on Amazon, exemplified by one who gushes: “I have no words to describe how profoundly this book has changed me AND my life. This book is unbelievable!. I was mesmerized by every word … AWESOME! Whewwwww!”

I think it is hard to argue with statements like “every addiction starts with pain” and I am willing to go along with the notion that we should live more in the moment rather than dwell on what might have been or what might be.

As William Henry Davies wrote in his poem, Leisure: “A poor life this is if full of care, we have no time to stand and stare”. The accelerated lives we lead means that, more than ever, we need to give ourselves time and space to take stock of where and who we are.

But to turn all this into a spiritual teaching is over egging it a bit. Tolle’s guru qualifications are very flimsy. His epiphany came during a sleepless night at the age of 29 after which he overcame his suicidal tendencies with a realisation that nice things happen when you just stop thinking. This might have been an excuse to overdose on daytime TV but he decided that becoming a spiritual leader was better career move. Continue reading

Zen water feature from the Japanese Garden at Portland, Oregon.

Maybe it’s the because it’s the end of a week in which I’ve been nursing a cold, but today I just felt a wave of calm that I want to hold onto and not analyse too closely.

A day for going with the flow and feeling good.