Rather than write a critical review, I have instead listed notes taken during my reading of this book. Perhaps this will help others determine whether or not the book is a good personal fit.
Author attended photography workshop led by Minor White.
Page 55 - Still point - being in the moment
“The first step to access the still point is simply to quiet down. We are constantly talking to ourselves. We spend our time preoccupied with the past, which doesn’t exist — it’s already happened. Or we are preoccupied with the future. It too doesn’t exist — it hasn’t happened yet. As a result, we miss the moment-to-moment awareness of our life and barely notice its passing. We eat but we don’t taste, we listen but we don’t hear, we love but we don’t feel. We spend our lives lost in our heads."
Page 71 - In knowing, we make reality inaccessible.
“How many individuals do we miss in our daily experience because we’ve stopped seeing and started knowing? How much damage do we create in our confusion? […] The poet Walt Whitman advises us: You must not know too much or be too precise or scientific about birds and trees and flowers and water-craft; a certain free margin, and even vagueness — perhaps ignorance, credulity — helps your enjoyment of these things.”
Page 100 - Creating a creative feedback group.
Demand that your audience express their feelings — not ideas, criticisms nor opinions.
Page 112 - "When originality becomes a goal, it is no longer original. The artist is merely trying to be different.”
- Mustard Seed Garden Manual of Painting (Taoist), using repetitive practice
- “Originality is born of craftsmanship, skill and diligent practice, not from trying to stand out in a crowd.”
“Those who know don’t talk. Those who talk don’t know.” — Laozi
Page 118 - Barriers - The pain of being over invested in our art; thank it and let it go.
Page 133 - Expectation disconnects us from reality.
- the “no mind” approach to the creation of art
Page 135 - “The moment the brush touches the blank canvas, the empty space springs into activity and enters a dynamic relationship with form."
Page 137 - the Zen aesthetic
“Our lifestyles have become extremely complex. How can we simplify our lives, reduce consumption, lower our impact on the environment, do less harm to other living things, reduce expenses, have fewer distractions, have less maintenance, enjoy more freedom and flexibility, and be able to live in a way that is financially less demanding? These are the questions that the simplicity of Zen can help to address.”
Page 141 - Still point, no mind, simplicity, ordinariness, mystery, playfulness, and suchness
Page 152 - Chado, the way of tea
- Wabi is a feeling of loneliness or solitude, reflecting a sense of non attachment and appreciation for the spontaneous unfolding of circumstances.
- Sabi is the suchness of ordinary objects, the basic, unmistakable uniqueness of a thing in and of itself.
- Aware is a feeling of nostalgia, a longing for the past, for something old and worn. It’s an acute awareness of the fleeting nature of life, its impermanence.
- Yugen is the mystery, the hidden, indescribable, or ineffable dimensions of reality.
Page 154 - Culture of excess
“To be simple means to make a choice about what’s important, and to let go of all the rest. When we are able to do this, our vision expands, our heads clear, and we can better see the details of our lives in all their incredible wonder and beauty. Simplicity does not come easily to us in the West. In general, we don’t like to give anything up. We tend to accumulate things, thinking that if something is good, we should have more of it. We go through life hoarding objects, people, credentials, ignoring the fact that the more things we have to take care of, the more burdensome our lives become. Our challenge is to find ways to simplify our lives."
Page 166 - Trust is necessary to create art. Trust in simplicity; trust that you are enough.
Chapter 11 - Mystery
Page 201 - Trust in yourself and in the creative process. Give yourself permission to *be* yourself and don’t be frightened by the unknown.
Page 221 - Poem: Endless Spring by John Daido Loori
“Set down the baggage, take off the blinders.
See for yourself
This very place is the valley of the Endless Spring.
This very body is the body of the universe."
Chapter 14 - Indra’s Net