Living Where Purpose and Belonging Meet. Finding Meaningful Long Life at the Ikigai Intersection
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- Nombre de pages181
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-39644-3
- EAN9783565396443
- Date de parution09/04/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille2 Mo
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
There is a place inside every life where what you love, what you are good at, what the world needs, and what sustains you quietly converge. The Japanese call it ikigai - a reason to rise, a reason to remain, a reason to keep going even when the days grow long or uncertain.
This book explores that intersection not as a destination to be found once and kept forever, but as a living quality - something sensed in small moments, ordinary rituals, and the gentle awareness of being exactly where one belongs.
It invites readers to move away from the modern urgency of optimizing their lives and toward the older, quieter practice of inhabiting them. Research consistently shows that those who carry a clear sense of purpose tend to live longer, experience less anxiety and depression, and navigate difficulty with greater resilience. But this book is not about the science alone. It is about the felt experience of meaning - what it is like to wake up with a reason, to work with care, to age without dread, and to sense that one's life, however ordinary, is woven into something larger than the self. Drawing from the wisdom of ikigai as understood in everyday Japanese life - particularly among the long-lived communities of Okinawa - this book reflects on what it means to stay curious, connected, and alive to one's calling across all seasons of life.
It does not tell you what your ikigai is. It invites you into the stillness where you might begin to recognize it yourself.
It invites readers to move away from the modern urgency of optimizing their lives and toward the older, quieter practice of inhabiting them. Research consistently shows that those who carry a clear sense of purpose tend to live longer, experience less anxiety and depression, and navigate difficulty with greater resilience. But this book is not about the science alone. It is about the felt experience of meaning - what it is like to wake up with a reason, to work with care, to age without dread, and to sense that one's life, however ordinary, is woven into something larger than the self. Drawing from the wisdom of ikigai as understood in everyday Japanese life - particularly among the long-lived communities of Okinawa - this book reflects on what it means to stay curious, connected, and alive to one's calling across all seasons of life.
It does not tell you what your ikigai is. It invites you into the stillness where you might begin to recognize it yourself.






















