The fresh morning breeze blows through your face, the sun is rising in the far horizon. An early ray of sunlight catches your vision and you feel temporarily overwhelmed by the gentle brightness of its glare but you welcome the comforting warmth caressing your skin. The chirping of morning birds and the steady buzzing of insects melt into a unified chorus of vitality that invigorates your slowly rising spirit. A smile comes to your lips. You live a simple rural life, uncomplicated, fulfilling. You labor during the day; you rest at night your back sore and aching but your soul peaceful and contented. This is the life of your ancestors, the life your father had, the life of his father before him, and the only kind of life they thought possible. But then a sudden gust of wind covers the footprints they’ve made and you find yourself astray drifting towards the crossroads of change, a scary but promising future forcing itself into your consciousness.
The sound of waves is a simple tale of a fisherman who falls in love with the beautiful daughter of the most prosperous man on their small island. At the surface a heart wrenching story of impossible love but on a deeper layer also a melancholy cry against the encroachment of the modern western world to the simple life of rural Japan. It is innocent, lovely, and enchanting like a young virgin pure at heart. It brings a certain air of unassuming pride to the simple life of the past which pierces the modern sentimentality our generation has learned to romanticize. The story spotlights the rustic lifestyle of a traditional, conservative country that during that time was slowly losing grip of its identity. Shinji, a young fisherman, physically gifted, but financially and mentally at the bottom of the pile, falls in love with the modest beauty of young Hatsue. She returns his affections and together they strive to stay afloat in the surging seas of the island’s moral and socioeconomic judgments.
This is a happy story, like the fairy tales and folklores that have been passed down from one generation to the next; we’ve all learned that good things come to good people.
“Once again it came to pass that Shinji, little given to thinking as he was, was lost in thought. He was thinking that in spite of all they’d been through, here they were in the end, free within the moral code to which they had been born, never once been estranged from the providence of the gods… that, in short, it was this little island, enfolded in darkness, that had protected their happiness and brought their love to this fulfillment.”
Work hard, obey the law, please the gods, follow your parents, get along with your neighbors, and love your country, this is the creed of our forefathers, their answer to the question of a good and happy life. Today we’ve complicated the answer to this simple question. We’ve introduced self-discovery, existentialism, all kinds of anxieties and other concepts, which befuddle the mind into a constant state of perplexity and indecision. Maybe the answer is not so complicated, then again maybe the answer to a question of the past is an answer from the past, and the answer to the question of the present, one from the present. But what I do know is that these little nuggets of wisdom have tided generations of our ancestors into the safe and prosperous shores of simple satisfaction. These overused instructions, no matter how ancient, are worth paying attention to, if not out of applicability then out of reverence. The moral codes and traditions of those before us, no matter how backward and revolting to our modern sensibilities, have played a guiding hand to the fruition of our current circumstances. And we owe it to them, from their success we’ve either immortalized or forgotten, to their mistakes we’ve learned from, to live lives worthy of the future.
“Oh, Shinji-san, let us go on truly, with strong hearts!”
In the dark seas and unexplored fields of the unknown, the lighthouse of the past shines ever so brightly guiding the children of tomorrow, reminding us of the simple lessons that the farmer and the fisherman have known for ages.
Let us not forget.