I am finally reading "Gorin-no-sho", and I love it! The concepts, logic of what I read so far feels right to me, natural to me, these feelings, thoughts expressed simply in explicit ways.
The way he lived, how he pursued the thing that mattered to him in his life, how later in his life he wanted to pass on his experience, his learning to a deciple, but going back to his belief that no one can pass on experience,
that one must learn in his own way, in domain of his life situation, with his own natural ability.
I have been struggling with the fact that I am not able to learn from someone else's experience but reading <u>Gorin-no-sho</u> shed light onto my predicament.
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