As with all things, wise discernment is necessary in applying or offering this teaching. One must know where one is to know whether more or less is required to achieve balance. For an uptight, Type A personality, it would be beneficial to embrace wabi sabi and, therefore reduce anxiety and stress when things "go wrong," break, or end (as all inevitably does). However, for a lazy, apathetic slacker, the philosophy of wabi sabi might be used as an excuse and justification. Notice that, traditionally, the Japanese are a highly disciplined, patient, and diligent people. They honour skill and expertise acquired only after years and years of study and practice. This is evident in the exceptional quality and technical excellence of their artwork, music, textiles, horticulture, architecture, etc. It's easy to see that in a culture like that, where people are encouraged to aim for perfection, it would feel like everything, one's own worth, is riding on attaining it. So wabi sabi balances that by acknowledging that, in fact, perfection is not attainable, and that's both okay and beautiful. That is not the mindset everywhere. There seems to be an epidemic of "who cares?" and "why bother?" and "whatever 🙄." And even a perverse celebration and adoration of poor quality junk, lack of interest and pride in surroundings, hygiene, home, work. For these, wabi sabi guides in the opposite direction of what is needed for balance. For them, self respect, high standards, and discipline are needed to cultivate the conditions necessary for true and lasting contentment. I have come to understand that there is no one-size-fits-all teaching, no one recipe that will work for everyone, even though, ultimately, we all strive for the same thing. There are countless skillful means to find happiness, peace, enlightenment, whatever you like to call it. The trick is to honestly and courageously discover the precise combination for YOUR heart and soul. What works perfectly well for someone else may not work for you. Wabi sabi is an example of an excellent philosophy that can be life-changing and very helpful indeed. But one person's medicine is another's poison. Be careful not to zig when what you really need is to zag.
Thank you for this video, is very informative on the Eastern wisdom, and am looking forward to see more. 🙂 Some thoughts.. how would be this same video showing instead, old people contrasting young, ill people with healthy ones, dead as well as new born., or just a "boring" image of nature juxtaposed with the beautiful ones exposed here...lets say an experience of Wabi Sabi on our daily life, instead of an altar prepared image of nature. It seems challenging, but very interesting and authentic one to pursue a solution.
If one of the key aspects of Wabi-Sabi is the appreciation of the imperfect, why do many videos - like this one - use images that could just as well be used to illustrate perfection: flowers in bloom, fruit bearing trees, serene walks along tree lined paths, waterfalls, well crafted artworks, architecture and plant arrangements. This video seems to celebrate perfection rather than imperfection. Even the actors casted seems to be chosen according to the same esthetic criterias that commercial advertising uses to sell consumer goods. It makes me feel like Wabi-Sabi is just another product that someone is trying to sell me. That can’t be the idea and spirit of Wabi-Sabi….
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Truly stimulating particularly for rigorous plant collectors/gardeners with biodiversity in focus.
As with all things, wise discernment is necessary in applying or offering this teaching. One must know where one is to know whether more or less is required to achieve balance.
For an uptight, Type A personality, it would be beneficial to embrace wabi sabi and, therefore reduce anxiety and stress when things "go wrong," break, or end (as all inevitably does). However, for a lazy, apathetic slacker, the philosophy of wabi sabi might be used as an excuse and justification.
Notice that, traditionally, the Japanese are a highly disciplined, patient, and diligent people. They honour skill and expertise acquired only after years and years of study and practice. This is evident in the exceptional quality and technical excellence of their artwork, music, textiles, horticulture, architecture, etc. It's easy to see that in a culture like that, where people are encouraged to aim for perfection, it would feel like everything, one's own worth, is riding on attaining it. So wabi sabi balances that by acknowledging that, in fact, perfection is not attainable, and that's both okay and beautiful.
That is not the mindset everywhere. There seems to be an epidemic of "who cares?" and "why bother?" and "whatever 🙄." And even a perverse celebration and adoration of poor quality junk, lack of interest and pride in surroundings, hygiene, home, work. For these, wabi sabi guides in the opposite direction of what is needed for balance. For them, self respect, high standards, and discipline are needed to cultivate the conditions necessary for true and lasting contentment.
I have come to understand that there is no one-size-fits-all teaching, no one recipe that will work for everyone, even though, ultimately, we all strive for the same thing. There are countless skillful means to find happiness, peace, enlightenment, whatever you like to call it. The trick is to honestly and courageously discover the precise combination for YOUR heart and soul. What works perfectly well for someone else may not work for you.
Wabi sabi is an example of an excellent philosophy that can be life-changing and very helpful indeed. But one person's medicine is another's poison. Be careful not to zig when what you really need is to zag.
Thank you for the wisdom❤
The joy of imperfection.
🕊
Notice that no one has a cell phone in their hands.
Thank you for this video, is very informative on the Eastern wisdom, and am looking forward to see more. 🙂
Some thoughts.. how would be this same video showing instead, old people contrasting young, ill people with healthy ones, dead as well as new born., or just a "boring" image of nature juxtaposed with the beautiful ones exposed here...lets say an experience of Wabi Sabi on our daily life, instead of an altar prepared image of nature. It seems challenging, but very interesting and authentic one to pursue a solution.
Thank you so much for your kind thoughts. I will certainly take your suggestions seriously.
If one of the key aspects of Wabi-Sabi is the appreciation of the imperfect, why do many videos - like this one - use images that could just as well be used to illustrate perfection: flowers in bloom, fruit bearing trees, serene walks along tree lined paths, waterfalls, well crafted artworks, architecture and plant arrangements. This video seems to celebrate perfection rather than imperfection. Even the actors casted seems to be chosen according to the same esthetic criterias that commercial advertising uses to sell consumer goods. It makes me feel like Wabi-Sabi is just another product that someone is trying to sell me. That can’t be the idea and spirit of Wabi-Sabi….
The pictures shown in this video don't fit to what was spoken.
You just steal