Zen and the art of traveling - Heikki Nousiainen - E-Book

Zen and the art of traveling E-Book

Heikki Nousiainen

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Beschreibung

Why we travel, how we travel, how are we going to travel in the future? These topics and many more are discussed and reflected on. Hopefully every kind of travel enthusiast finds something entertaining and interesting to read. You have always time to finish one short story before your flight, train or bus departs. Bon voyage!

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Seitenzahl: 189

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019

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Table of Contents

About movement and motion

The necessity of traveling

About expectancies and preparations

Hit the road

Shortly about Zen and Tao

Longing for somewhere else

Traveling as a solution to our problems

About expectancies and preparations

Change

English chocolate cake

Remote longing

Respect

The paradox of traveling

Modern humanists

The Asian experience

Armchair travelling

The importance of travelling to severability and detachment

The world of scents

Slow travelling

Travelling alone

The philosophy of failure ang getting lost

Unity- solitude or loneliness

To plan or not to plan?

How to find good restaurants?

Voluntary work- one way to experience the world and stay longer times abroad

Coach surfers

The China syndrome

Travelling in cinema

”Hobby traveling”

Travelling at work

Working on trips, boost your creativity.

Be tourist in your own neighbourhood

Reluctance to be a tourist

Travelling in your work 2; experiences from a campsite

The last comments about living abroad and to be immigrant

Change of perspective- do traveling open and broaden our minds?

Sustainability

Marco Polo's travels

Visions of the future travelling

Coming home

About movement and motion

Movement and motion have always been an important part of my life.

My other big passion, travelling is also movement, and searching. Writing is searching, a process, kind of movement. When I was writing this book, I found things that I did not expect to find.

Picasso claimed that he does not search, he finds. Maybe it is a creative, good way to deal with things in every aspect of life; not only in arts and literature.

Travelling can be a way to search your true self. Even tai chi (taiji) can be a journey inside, to research yourself.

I have been travelling all around the physical world both teaching tai chi and studying it. I am convinced that I had been travelling even without my passion to tai chi, but it has been an excellent way to learn to know new countries and people. As a tourist you are in a way always an outsider, and you can get only limited amount of information about how people live their lives and which values and thoughts guide their lives.

Tai chi is a taoistic martial art and Tao means a way or road. Tai chi is often compared with Chinas biggest river, even writing can be described as a river, meandering sometimes fast, sometimes slow. I found out under the working process of this book, how my passion for tai chi, writing and travelling are very closely interconnected. Their importance for me showed also to be greater than I had thought. During many years their importance has varied as in a good relationship; you should be able to change. Accept change and be able to be sometimes strong, sometimes weak, alternate instead having fixed roles. Unfortunately this is not often the case.

To write this book was great fun. The hardest thing was to limit the number of books and wise thoughts, that people have already written and said about travelling. I did not want to make this book a graveyard of citation. I take a solace of my plans to write more books, where I can tell things I had to exclude here. I find a graveyard of citation as a very good way to describe books and academic writings, where you do not trust on your own thinking, creativity and originality. I have also a tendency to hide me behind quotes of big thinkers. I was planning to use books that have a status as canon but decided to trust my own experiences and stories I have heard when travelling.

The social network you have at home is temporarily not there when you travel. In a way we are more vulnerable, unprotected and isolated from normal life when traveling, and I think it is a good thing.

You better keep your eyes and ears open, like a documentary film director Malik Bendellou did. He travelled around the whole world during one year, to find a good story. Finally he heard about a musician that had cult status in South Africa. He was told that the musician was dead but then he found out that he was maybe alive and kicking. He decided to find out what was true and he found the man, Sixto Rodriguez alive. Rodriguez had no idea that he was famous in South Africa, he had neither got any income for all the selling of his music that had been done there. He made a documentary film about it, "Sugar man", which has won a lot of prices in many countries.

There are interesting coincidences and connections with the director and me. Bendjellou was an actor when he was a child and I loved to go and see the films where he was acting. I hated Disney films and used to sleep in Disney productions, if it was possible for all the screaming that happens in them. I saw once a film with my youngest daughter where the director was acting, but I did not understand all the relations the adults had in the film. They had divorced and remarried cross and tick. I asked my daughter about the character the directors mother was playing and wondered who was her new husband in the film. My eight years old daughter started with words " Dad, it is obvious...". For my little daughter, the complicated network of relationships was totally clear, for me it was mysterious and complicated.

There is even one more personal connection between us. I contacted the director Bendjellou several times to get an interview with him. I wanted to travel to Sweden and do it but he did not have time. Finally he agreed and asked me to book a time for interview with his press secretary.

I never travelled to Sweden because Malik Bedjellou committed suicide a short time after our conversation in telephone. I was quite shocked about what had happened. I saw his picture in newspapers. In my mind was only a face of a boy who looked intelligent and friendly. Now I saw an adult man who did not have the strength to live after a long depression, although he could fulfill his dream and he achieved success, the most people do not even dare to dream of.

His journey is finished but his films continue to touch people. For example a Finnish man decide to find out who is the mystical Heikki, who Sugar man sings about. It showed to be a man from Estonia, who was active in labour union and a friend of Sixto. Many claim, that Sugar man is the real Bob Dylan. He has been living his own texts of his songs and not only inventing and lying about his background as Bob Dylan did. This being said, I am not denying Bob Dylan's talent. He was the first musician who got the Nobel Prize, so he is accepted everywhere.

Afterwards I have been thinking why I did not research about the man Heikki and continued my documentary, where the story of Sugar man was planned to be a part. I was maybe too shocked and quite often we do not see the things that happen near us, we think we have to search them far away from home. At home never happens anything. This is not true, everything happens near us and that is basicly what we can make art of. In books, films and paintings we have to know the things and proceedings, how could we describe something we have no knowledge of?

I had a favourite book for some time, I used to read some pages carefully in bed before falling asleep or I plocked it up from the bedside table when I could not sleep. The author of the book had sailed all the seven seas in a really little boat. His favorite idea was that if man wants to explain some phenomena in the physical world, man has to research and explain everything else in the world aswell. I think it is true but unfortunately it is a mission impossible. If you want to explain a phenomenon like tai chi, or traveling or why not writing, it starts to get complicated. Science can study only small areas at one time. There is evidence, that mankind once survived when arts and decoration started appear. We do not know if they have some causality, but it is very interesting. We can also have fantastic theories or guesses, even qualified such but we still cannot be sure. I know one thing and it is that I, as a writer and filmmaker, ask questions and study some aspects of reality. Politicians have the answers, or they say they have.

The idea to write about traveling came when I had discussions with a german Kali (martial art from Philippine Islands) teacher. He told me that he hated traveling but loved to meet people in other countries and cultures, he even enjoyed to be there.

I did not have the heart to tell him, how releasing I had experienced the traveling to teach in different countries after a normal, busy week in my civil profession. At that time I had to work to be able to do my writing and teaching. I was working to finance my work that I considered my real work.

I also really enjoyed my flights from Asia back to Europe. The training there was hard in the very hot and humid climate, especially in Malaysia. I also felt the pressure, in a country, there is still death penalty in use and democratic and human rights are not necessarily applied. In many ways the country is modern and advanced but there are still sides I do not like. It was also so hot that after hard training I did not sleep much. It was absolutely fantastic to eat and drink and relax in a comfortable temperature in the plain and I felt safe.

I contemplated the opposite way to relate, for example what comes to poverty and violence. I have hard time to meet these things, when traveling, and all the good advices type (Learn to ignore it, you cannot help everybody) have not helped me.

Apparently some people are not finding these thing as troublesome. The german teacher was not worried about poverty and violence. In contrast, he envied the joy of life, the poor children showed every day amongst the poverty. He was wondering why he was not feeling himself happy in the middle of abundance of everything. He had the biggest BMW you could buy, the same with TV etc. I think he had made an observation that was important and I was thinking that he maybe learned more of traveling than me. We saw the same things but experienced and interpreted them differently.

The different ways to take a stand in front of problems and how to solve them are also interesting. If my studies in economics at the University level increased my caution and critical thinking, even leaning on known austerities, on different fields of knowledge, so studies in sociology was supporting my interest in different societies, cultures and ways of lives. I have accused University for decreasing creative thinking and spontaneous action. Even true entrepreneurship with too much analyzing and identifying problems and obstacles does not work. A true entrepreneur has to be somewhat crazy and invest all his/her time, money and effort, with other words risk everything. Both are good to have, theoretical knowledge and the right craziness to risk everything.

I had a Kung Fu teacher in Malaysia where socioeconomical conditions and power structures, even ethnicity influenced and dictated my training. We could not train in parks because gathering on public place was forbidden, even my teacher and me made a crowd, and people came to warn us that we can be arrested. This prohibition dated back to riots between chinese shop owners and malay people. Chinese people is a little minority but they control economical life.

My ambition with this little book is present different things that are connected with traveling, I outline different ways to travel. I am just thinking about a phenomenon called traveling.

Partly my interest is personal. Have I flied from or to something by traveling? Was it a solution to my problem, that I get bored very easily. I hope to get some answer during the writing process but I do not necessarily write about it, let see what happens.

What is fascinating us in traveling so tremendously? To see new places, experiences, meetings in different countries? Maybe motion? We are made to moving our bodies. We suffer now, and get sick of all sitting. Can it be change, coming home, to be able to tell about things to our families and loved ones, social prestige? I could continue the list, but instead I let my brain to continue the process. I am convinced that I will not get the final right answer, but hopefully I get new questions and learn a lot about different things. I hope this book is a report about some of my thoughts, and I can add a lot of new material after couple of years.

When I was working in a place, with Rudolf Steiners antroposofi as a guideline, I had a collaborator who was interested in traveling generally, and specifically in Greece. We worked with autistic children and had time in the evenings to exchange thoughts, because the children had to to bed quite early. Greece has been my favorite under decades, and because she knew places, which I did not know, so I listened to her stories with fascination. Autumn 2001 I got a very cheap flight and hotel in Greece quite late in the autumn. I told about this to my work-mate and hope she knew the place I was going to. The comment I received was" I would not like to go there this time of the year". I went to Greece, despite the expert was thinking, it was a bad idea. My time in Greece was one of the best I ever experienced when traveling. You can listen to opinions but be critical. I love to tell my students in martial arts about a definition of a good student. A good student listens very carefully what his/her teacher says, an excellent student thinks about what he/she heard and question it. I would like to add my own thing, a good student of Zen tries out the things on his/her own and evaluates if they work just for him/her. Just do it; like in the Nikes ad.

According to Mencius, the evil of a man is to be the teacher of others. This book tries to avoid it, although you can catch one or two advice or tip, if you read carefully.

My own theory about literature is that it can function as a consolation and inspiration. My late Kung Fu teacher, L. Leong (1999) used to say, that I should be happy if I get one of thousand people to change their life and be more healthy and happy by training. According to him, it is no use to think about the rest 999 persons as a failure. I hope that I manage to bring comfort and joy to some readers of this book. Enjoy.

The necessity of traveling

According to a latin proverb sailing is necessary, life is not. This saying reflects the values and reality of that time. Wealth was made by commerce and sailing enabled commerce. Nowadays to know Navigare necesse est, vivere non esset, is needed only to impress your company in an english pub. You can still see paintings with ships with that text under. Well, maybe even that era is finished already. As a young student I saw one in Plymouth.

I wanted to study languages but I was not interested to learn a dead language, latin. My fellow students, mostly female, knew the importance of latin, if you wanted to study on the University level. I wanted to learn to communicate. I was one of two who wanted learn french instead of latin of 183 students, so I did not get my chance.

When I teached in the monastery of Valamo, once a young munk drove me to airport. He was originally russian but talked perfect finnish. He told me that it was due to latin studies. He could understand the structure of a new language and it made it easy to learn whatever language. That impressed me but my goal is to communicate with people, to be able to follow the political life, cultural life, sports, be an active part of the society, so I still prefer living and changing languages.

Before I move on to describe my passion traveling, I want to make a program declaration. I do not believe that traveling is necessary. I fully understand people who do not like it, and even despise it. One of my good friends, psychologist, thinks that people like me who almost live for traveling or maybe even of traveling, are not the heroes. The real heroes are the people who go to their work every day, year after year and carry on. I can not disagree. The point is, that for me, traveling is necessary and I find it interesting, fascinating, broading my thinking and teaching me a lot of new things and giving new experiences.

This book is dedicated to people like me in the first place. Maybe some reflections interest even Brexit people, traveling has downsides and troubles, so why we continue doing it and do not simply stay at home?

About expectancies and preparations

What can be more enjoyable and generating more pleasure than, in the middle of a grey everyday life and its problems, dream just for a short moment about the future journey. Instantly we can move to a place, where we have booked a ticket, no matter if it is in a place with palm trees, in the alps, in a big city or on a little unknown island.

One very rainy Scandinavian summer was saved by a booked journey to Greece. I was having quite rough time in my private life and it helped me to get through that time by thinking about the future journey. I knew that after the summer I could relax in a nice warm place. It functioned as a mantra or the last straw, the main thing was that it helped me.

If you can afford it, I think that you can get addicted to travelling and waiting for next journey. For the most people their economic situation does not allow it, so it is better to enjoy the future journey with good conscious, when there is a possibility to do that. Maybe the pleasure of waiting for a journey has something to do with waiting for Christmas. For the most of us lucky ones, it brings back warm and pleasant memories. On the whole, child-mindedness and playing makes us creative and happy, it cannot be wrong to try to achieve that state of mind.

Before travelling I normally borrow books about the destination. I do not mean old basic tourist information but for example literature that takes place in that destination. I also buy a good map and basic guidebook, if I do not happen to have them already.

My Swiss friend showed me once all the maps he had bought during his many journeys. He had loads of them, maybe thousands. When I was cycling and walking through Europe I had to send maps back home at regular intervals. They took too much space and were unnecessary weight. When you are trekking it is good to have one map where you can see the whole picture, not only the more detailed maps. It was interesting to see where I was in the big picture, instead of only concentrating on the next day’s stage. While waiting for the journey or trek you can study the maps in detail. I have a good tip on how to get a map to last even in rough conditions. Cover the map with plastic. The plastic should be glued on the map, so it will never break and you can draw your route on it. You can use it even when it is raining; it simply makes your trekking more pleasant. I learnt this when I took my pilot license. It was very practical to be able to plot important key points for aviation directly on the map, and draw your own course and then wipe it away before next flight.

Hit the road

Travelling and riding towards the sunset have lost a little bit of their magic. To say goodbye was more romantic and dramatic before the mobile phones era. Juhani Aho gives us a grasp on what it was like to take the road 100 years ago.

A young student is leaving to go to study at the University in the capital city and the whole family followes him to the harbour. There is also a girl who gave him mittens the day before. His friends are also there, even friends of the family. The young student is a little bit uncomfortable, but enjoys the people’s interest at the same time. The bell rings and he has to go.

Mobile phones and internet allows us to be in contact all the time, so there is no need for dramatic goodbyes. There is no return without leaving, so I enjoy nowadays taking the road without too much sentimentality.

Trains are used in films as a symbol for leaving. Older Finnish audience will never forget when the actor Vesa- Matti Loiri was running after a train, which was transporting her mother away from him. The train is often used as a symbol for modern life, dangerous and threatening but at the same time fascinating and inexorable. The first film ever showed in public at the cinema was, precisely, a train arriving at the railway station.

The famous speechlessness of Scandinavians does not apply in trains, at least not on Friday nights in the restaurant car. The tradition of friendliness and the habit of small talk in trains is probably over soon