null Skip to main content
Every purchase supports the
Art Gallery of NSW
Added to cart
Item name
Every purchase supports the Art Gallery of NSW
  • Magritte exhibition shop
  • Cao Fei
  • Art Gallery exclusives
  • Prints
  • Books
  • Homewares
  • Fashion
  • Kids
  • Gifts

Kokoro: Japanese Wisdom for a Life Well Lived

ISBN: 9780349425580 ISBN: 9780349425580 ISBN: 9780349425580

$45.00
Member’s price $40.50Not a member? Join Now

Ships within 2-11 business days

One year. Two devastating losses. Three sacred Japanese mountains. A major life transition, a heart full of grief and a revelation that changes everything.

Join Japanologist Beth Kempton on a pilgrimage through rural Japan in search of answers to some of life's biggest questions: How do we find calm in the chaos and beauty in the darkness? How do we let go of the past and stop worrying about the future? What can an awareness of impermanence teach us about living well?

Together you will journey to the deep north of Japan, hike ancient forests, watch the moon rise over mountains of myth and encounter a host of wise teachers along the way - Noh actors, chefs, taxi drivers, coffee shop owners, poets, philosophers and the spirits that inhabit the land. You will contemplate the true nature of time at one of the world's strictest Zen temples and nothing will be quite the same again.

This book is an invitation to cultivate stillness and contentment in an ever-changing, uncertain world. It all begins with the kokoro, a profound Japanese term which represents the intelligent heart, the feeling mind and the embodied spirit of every human being.


Kempton, Beth
Hardback
272 pages

Format: Hardcover

Dimensions: 20cm x 15cm x 1 cm

More

Members save 10% at the Gallery Shop*

* excludes DVDs and Gallery publications

Members save 10% at the Gallery Shop*

Join or renew now

* excludes DVDs and Gallery publications

Get our newsletter

Be sure you never miss out on new products, our sales and special offers!

We acknowledge the traditional custodians of the Country on which the Gallery stands, the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, and recognise their continuing connection to land, waters and culture.