Musashi's Dokkodo (The Way of Walking Alone)
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dokkodo
Insurance Executive:
People with fetishes or those with a particular mental illness deliberately seek the opposite of what is normally considered pleasure, and redefine it for themselves with misery, discomfort, and pain. The rest of us, however, seek what is ordinarily considered pleasure in our health, food, relationships with friends, partners/lovers, hobbies, and work. As a martial artist, I take pleasure in training. Does it mean I wasted all those years if I’m never called upon to apply my skills for real? Absolutely not. The act of training for its own sake, the resultant fitness, friendships, discipline, and the satisfaction of knowing I succeed when the going gets tough, grueling, and sometimes painful, is a pleasure that is immeasurable. My husband and I dine out often. We do it because it gives us pleasure (and we don’t have to do dishes). It doesn’t have to be fine dining with a bill close to the national debt. In fact, some of the best meals are reasonably priced, inexpensive even. Many of the food carts so popular in the cities nowadays have incredibly delicious and hard to find food. Pleasure from the dining experience isn’t about the tab but about the food, the surroundings, the conversation, and the sense of satisfaction we feel after. I design jewelry. It can be tedious work, a strain on my eyes and on my patience. Still, I derive great pleasure from the often microscopic physicality of it, the creative process, and the final product. When I sell my work, that too is a pleasure. I enjoy many things from the perfectly brewed cup of freshly ground coffee, to smooth nitro beer, deep meditation, and a movie that makes me think about it long after the credits have ended. The commonality in all these things is the moment, that is, being in the moment, right here, right now. If I were to think about Wednesday’s workout in the middle of the one I’m doing on Monday, or if I were to think about Thanksgiving while eating sushi in July, or if I ponder my next creation while working on the jewelry project right in front of me now, I would miss the pleasure of being totally and completely present in the moment. There is no harm in looking forward to experiencing pleasure—as that too can be a pleasurable experience. Likewise, there is no harm in deliberately planning “seeking pleasure”—a weekend at the beach, a finished project, meeting new people. But I don’t think this type of seeking is what Musashi was referring to, anyway. I think he was telling us that pleasure is not just in the future; it is right here, right now. In other words, he is telling us not to spend all our time remembering past pleasures or longing for futures ones. Buddha said, “Do not dwell in the past, do not dream of the future, concentrate the mind on the present moment.” Mark Twain seemed to paraphrase Buddha when he wrote, “Don’t live in the past, don’t ponder about the future, stay at the present moment, now, always.” Writers, such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Wayne Dyer, Thich Nhat Hanh, and many others say the same thing. Happiness is found where you are right now. The past is gone and the future is, well, in the future. Therefore, enjoy and thus benefit from this very moment. Take pleasure where you are and with what you have right now. Take pleasure that you can read (there are millions who can’t). Take pleasure from where you’re reading this: home, car, work break, commuter train, or in a park. Take pleasure in what you have: your health, your possessions, your job, your clothing, your family, and your friends. Many, many people don’t have these things. Go ahead and plan for the future and go ahead and reminisce on past pleasures. Then return to the moment and enjoy all you have at this very minute. |
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