タグ: Buddhism_ENG

  • “Zen and Japanese culture” Daisetz T. Suzuki (1940) Review | Japanese means zen

    “Zen and Japanese culture” Daisetz T. Suzuki (1940) Review | Japanese means zen

    ★★★★★ A classic book on Japan and Zen. Zen is so ubiquitous in Japan that being Japanese means Zen. It was written for the Western audience so it's explained logically. A real starting point to study Japanese culture.
    
    
    🔽 log 🔽
    Zen and Japanese culture
    Daisetsu Suzuki
    Daisetz T. Suzuki
    禅と日本文化
    鈴木大拙
    Read 2024.4


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽
    It was a collection of lectures on zen by Daisetsu Suzuki in 1938, first published in English and in 1940 it was translated to Japanese.
    This book remains as a very important source for anyone who's interested in Japan and zen - in a serious way.
    Today, "I love Japan" is something I hear so much that it basically has no meaning - unless they can name a few real Japanese things.

    Anyway, it might be difficult to read in a sense that it's old, but because it was for the Western audience explanations are logical so in that sense it's easier to understand, even for Japanese today.

    It's not an introduction to zen as such, but if you are truly interested in zen and Google search won't help you much, then this is the book to turn to.
    When a book on zen is for Japanese audience (and if it's translated to other languages) it tries to make you "read the room" to grasp the idea of zen.
    On a separate note. Interestingly, there's an argument (elsewhere, not this book) that because in Japan, zen or Buddhism is indeed in the air, you cannot shut it off so that is why Japanese people don't need to feel strongly about being Buddhist or religious or spiritual it's part of their lives anyway, many Japanese will declare that they are not religious.
    However, in places like US, Christianity is not in the air, you must go to the church to feel it, so they feel strongly about being Christian or religious, or not.

    Zen is intuitive, it is not something you explain through theories, but with ink painting or haiku, even tea ceremony or garden.
    Minimalism and the love of the nature, that spirit is naturally in Japanese arts and lifestyles, therefore being Japanese is being zen.

    It's true, I do feel that it's true, I want to it to be forever true, but I am not sure if it continues to be true.

    It is the Japan that hundreds of thousands of foreign tourists fantasise, but isn't it the Japan that only exists in our naïve imaginations?
    The rapid economical growth of the 90s is in the past, and the people of that generation worked hard to aim for better lives, more luxury, better education for their kids - admittingly something that is far from zen.
    Today, young people in Japan do not believe that their lives would get better when they grow up.
    Frankly they are not interested. They don't want more stuff, and they don't need more.
    So, are we going back to zen?
    Does that mean, after all, we come back to the statement that, yes, being Japanese means being zen?

    🔽 Where to buy 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●
    Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton Classics)
    Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton Classics)
    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Zen and Japanese Culture (Princeton Classics)

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Lo Zen e la cultura giapponese
    Lo Zen e la cultura giapponese (Italiano)


  • “A monk’s Guide to a Clean House and Mind” Shoukei Matsumoto (2011) Review | Monks’ main job, cleaning

    “A monk’s Guide to a Clean House and Mind” Shoukei Matsumoto (2011) Review | Monks’ main job, cleaning

    ★★★★☆ A post-religion-monk. What is his secret? Cleaning. When we think about Buddhist monks, we always think about them cleaning the garden – well, because they are always cleaning.

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    A monk's Guide to a Clean House and Mind
    Shoukei Matsumoto, 2011
    お坊さんが教えるこころが整う掃除の本松本圭介
    Japan
    144 pages
    Read in 2026.01
    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    I listen to his podcast all the time so reading this was like, ah finally.
    He studied Philosophy in Uni of Tokyo, and got MBA in India - he's undeniably smart, sharp and as he says is a post-religion monk.
    What is his secret?
    When we think about a Buddhist monk, we always think about them cleaning the garden - well, we're not wrong, they are always cleaning.
    And his secret is cleaning.

    This book, though he reflects on the spirituality and Buddhism often, is about the actual cleaning.
    There are many things non-Japanese houses don't have, but he goes through all the main rooms and outdoor space, one by one.

    If your room is clean, so are your heart and mind, no doubt.
    We all know that but cleaning is, at least for me, not easy at all.
    Maybe I should start wiping surfaces more often and generally speaking have less things around. A start.


    松本紹圭さんは実は私いっつもポッドキャスト聞いてて掃除の話もよく出てくるので、こういう本だったのか!という感じ。
    東大で哲学を学んだ後インドでMBA取得とかなり賢く鋭い次世代の僧侶として活躍される裏には徹底した掃除が。
    そうよね、家がきれいだと脳内も心もきれいになるよね。
    そこは分かる。
    次のステップである実際の掃除が難しい。
    🔽 Related pages 🔽
    tag
    🔽 Where to buy / Summary and more info 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    A Monk's Guide to a Clean House and Mind


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    A Monk's Guide to a Clean House and Mind

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Manuale di pulizie di un monaco buddhista. Spazziamo via la polvere e le nubi dell'anima (italiano)

  • “The Practice of Not Thinking” Ryunosuke Koike (2012) Review | Practical advices

    “The Practice of Not Thinking” Ryunosuke Koike (2012) Review | Practical advices

    ★★★★☆ A book from an unusual monk in Japan, no I’ll say it, he’s a bit weird, but in a nice way. You can’t change other people or the environment, nor control your brain from being negative so practice to shift your focus to something else.

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    考えない練習
    小池龍之介
    The Practice of Not Thinking
    Ryunosuke Koike, 2012
    Read in 2025.10


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    A book from an unusual monk in Japan, no I'll say it, he's a bit weird, but in a nice way.

    When you hear it's Buddhism, you prep yourself thinking, it must be something difficult, spiritual and mysterious.
    But it's really the opposite, it's trying not to think about what's bothering you or what you don't like, you switch that part off, and focus on something else using your five senses.

    For example, let's say you are annoyed by some unpleasant sound, then don't focus on it, try focusing on some other quiet sound you hear far away.
    But to be able to do that, you must practice to notice these sounds.

    You can't change other people, you can't change the environment, you also cannot control your brain from being negative (because negative is a strong feeling that unfortunately attracts your brain) so practice to shift your focus to something else.
    It's practical and eye opening, not really religious or spiritual.
    🔽 Where to buy / Summary and more info 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    The Practice of Not Thinking


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    The Practice of Not Thinking: A Guide to Mindful Living

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Smetti di pensare (troppo) e vivi meglio. Dal tuo amico incantatore di pensieri (Italiano)
  • “It’s Okay Not to Look for the Meaning of Life” Jikisai Minami (2017) Review | Live YOUR life

    “It’s Okay Not to Look for the Meaning of Life” Jikisai Minami (2017) Review | Live YOUR life

    ★★★★★  It teaches you how to live without suffering unnecessarily, by a Zen monk who’s eccentric strict yet humane. “If you think that you can decide anything by yourself, you are wrong. If conditions change, your decision becomes invalid”

    
    
    
    
    
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    It's Okay Not to Look for the Meaning of Life: A Zen Monk's Guide to Living Stress-Free One Day at a Time
    Jikisai Minami, 2017
    284 pages
    Read in 2025.10


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    A book that teaches you how to live without suffering unnecessarily.
    Don't struggle unnecessarily, don't believe unnecessarily, just accept as things are.

    Don't have too much pride or be too conscious, we were born by chance, and we'll die eventually.
    Don't try to overcome sadness or struggles.
    Yes it all sounds too easy, easier said than done, but I guess if you keep telling yourself it becomes a part of you and it becomes natural - I hope.

    I heard him on a podcast and I was completely shocked how eccentric he was, so honest (he says he accepted to write this book because by chance his wife needed a car!) so strict (Darth Vader of the zen monastery) yet so humane, and very funny.

    Some of the lines I liked (it's probably different from the original English translation!)

    "If you think that you can decide anything by yourself, you are wrong and childish. You as a being only exist under certain conditions. If the conditions change, your decision becomes invalid"

    "I think you can live with regrets. Then one day you will find a meaning in your regrets"

    "If you can't overcome sadness, then don't try, it's okay"
    🔽 Where to buy / Summary and more info 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    It's Okay Not to Look for the Meaning of Life: A Zen Monk's Guide to Living Stress-Free One Day at a Time


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    It's Okay Not to Look for the Meaning of Life: A Zen Monk's Guide to Living Stress-Free One Day at a Time

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    It's Okay Not to Look for the Meaning of Life: A Zen Monk's Guide to Living Stress-free One Day at a Time (English)
  • “This Monk Wears Heels” Kodo Nishimura (2022) Review | Make-up and Buddhism

    “This Monk Wears Heels” Kodo Nishimura (2022) Review | Make-up and Buddhism

    ★★★★☆  Make-up is to enhance the beauty, not to hide behind it, and Buddhism is to find truth, by being true. So his purposes are not as contradictory. Such a unique person, a person with a mission.

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    This Monk Wears Heels: Be Who You Are
    Kodo Nishimura, 2022
    224 pages
    Read in 2022.09


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    Such a unique person, a person with a mission.
    Saw him on Netflix and love the fact that he is a monk and a make-up artist, at the same time, with the same purposes - though they seem completely the opposite, they are not.

    This book would be a perfect self-help book for a young person who is struggling to find true self, (whether they are gay or not, I'm not gay and this is inspiring) and his message is clear; be proud.

    Make-up is there to enhance the beauty, not to hide behind it, and Buddhism is there to find truth, by being true. So his purposes are not as contradictory as it might seem.

    🔽 Where to buy / Summary and more info 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    This Monk Wears Heels: Be Who You Are


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    This Monk Wears Heels: Be Who You Are

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
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  • “Nine Lives” William Dalrymple (2013) Review | Being holy in India today

    “Nine Lives” William Dalrymple (2013) Review | Being holy in India today

    ★★★★★ It’s a travel journal, except that the focus is not on the places but the people these places “created”. These traditions are disappearing. As India is now going for a national holy story, as they call it Rama-fication, how long will these very local faiths last.

    
    
    
    
    
    🔽 log 🔽
    Nine Lives: In Search of the Sacred in Modern India
    William Dalrymple, 2013
    304 pages
    Read in 2025.11


    🔽 Book review and notes 🔽

    A slightly different touch to other books I've read from Mr. Dalrymple.
    It's a travel journal, except that the focus is not on the places but the people these places "created".

    The book focuses on the 9 people who are admired as holy and sacred, because they have been "decided" to be as holy being by the society, or sometimes they chose to, or maybe they have great skills like creating the religious art.

    As always Dalrymple is all about embracing as things are, he's not here to judge, he's just here to pass on their stories and traditions to a wider world.
    As he says, and indeed as he saw, these traditions are disappearing.
    They are not necessarily less religious but the modern India is now going for a national, standardised holy story, the nationalistic Hinduism, as Dalrymple calls it Rama-fication, rather than 1000s of very local stories.

    India is lucky to have Dalrymple as their historian today, his curious eyes will record everything and with passion he shares with us.

    The book focuses on;
    A devoted Jain nun, dancer in Kannur Kerala, daughters dedicated to a goddess, but actually working as prostitutes, singers in Rajasthan, devotee of Sufi that embraces Hindu and Islam, Tibetan monk who was a soldier, idol maker in Tamil, devotee in Tarapith for a fearful goddess, and a blind singer in Bengal.
    🔽 Where to buy / Summary and more info 🔽

    ●●● Amazon.com (US) ●●●

    Nine Lives: In Search of the Sacred in Modern India (Vintage Departures)


    ●●● Amazon.co.uk (UK) ●●●
    Nine Lives: In Search of the Sacred in Modern India

    ●●● Amazon.it (Italy) ●●●
    Nove vite (Italiano)