Eastern Utah Libraries Catalog: Duchesne, Heber, Roosevelt, & Vernal

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Eight million ways to happiness : wisdom for inspiration and healing from the heart of Japan / Hiroko Yoda.

By: Material type: TextPublisher: New York, NY : Tiny Reparations Books, [2025]Copyright date: 2025Description: 368 pages : illustrations ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780593474433
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Eight million ways to happinessDDC classification:
  • 158.1 23/eng/20251222
LOC classification:
  • BF637.S4 Y63 2025
Contents:
Part one: awakening: eight million Kami -- The invisibles: Shinto -- The harmony of conflict: Buddhism -- Making friends with monsters: Shugendo -- Part two: darkness: walking through hardship -- Angry ghosts: Onryo -- Belief without belief: Hanshin-hangi -- Curating rituals: funeral Buddhism -- Part three: rebirth: everyday spirituality -- Love will travel: Kuyo -- Rebirth: all roads lead to Kumano -- Prayer and play: Asobi.
Summary: "A Japanese cultural historian shares a path to joyful living drawn from her nation's unique approach to spirituality and nature, offering a blend of memoir, cultural reporting, and practical guidance for anyone struggling to find balance in our turbulent modern world. Everyone's in the pursuit of happiness, but few know how to attain it. Millions around the world have turned to Japan for advice on finding their Ikigai, or summoning The Courage to Be Disliked. Japan's spiritual traditions hide in plain sight, forming the basis of so much of what we love about the country's culture. Without Japan's spiritual sustenance, Jiro wouldn't dream of sushi; Hayao Miyazaki's films wouldn't spirit us away; and Marie Kondo wouldn't spark joy. In her book Eight Million Ways to Happiness, Hiroko Yoda offers the culmination of her decade-long odyssey into the spiritual heart of her homeland. Readers follow Hiroko as she trains as a Shinto shrine-dancer, partakes in Buddhist funeral rituals, ascends holy mountains with Shugendo ascetics, and meets one of Japan's last living itako, a traditional mystic. Her stories-personal, cultural, and historical-offer life lessons for readers of any background. Hiroko awakens readers to the idea of a traditional spiritual flexibility that seamlessly coexists with the modern secular world, fortifying us through life's inevitable ups and downs. We are all subject to forces beyond our control, but we are also part of a bigger natural system that can strengthen us-if we learn how to reconnect with it"--Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Cover image Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Materials specified Vol info URL Copy number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds Item hold queue priority Course reserves
BOOK Wasatch County Library Second Floor General NonFiction 158.1 Yoda (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out 04/06/2026 34301002106583
Total holds: 0

Includes bibliographical references.

Part one: awakening: eight million Kami -- The invisibles: Shinto -- The harmony of conflict: Buddhism -- Making friends with monsters: Shugendo -- Part two: darkness: walking through hardship -- Angry ghosts: Onryo -- Belief without belief: Hanshin-hangi -- Curating rituals: funeral Buddhism -- Part three: rebirth: everyday spirituality -- Love will travel: Kuyo -- Rebirth: all roads lead to Kumano -- Prayer and play: Asobi.

"A Japanese cultural historian shares a path to joyful living drawn from her nation's unique approach to spirituality and nature, offering a blend of memoir, cultural reporting, and practical guidance for anyone struggling to find balance in our turbulent modern world. Everyone's in the pursuit of happiness, but few know how to attain it. Millions around the world have turned to Japan for advice on finding their Ikigai, or summoning The Courage to Be Disliked. Japan's spiritual traditions hide in plain sight, forming the basis of so much of what we love about the country's culture. Without Japan's spiritual sustenance, Jiro wouldn't dream of sushi; Hayao Miyazaki's films wouldn't spirit us away; and Marie Kondo wouldn't spark joy. In her book Eight Million Ways to Happiness, Hiroko Yoda offers the culmination of her decade-long odyssey into the spiritual heart of her homeland. Readers follow Hiroko as she trains as a Shinto shrine-dancer, partakes in Buddhist funeral rituals, ascends holy mountains with Shugendo ascetics, and meets one of Japan's last living itako, a traditional mystic. Her stories-personal, cultural, and historical-offer life lessons for readers of any background. Hiroko awakens readers to the idea of a traditional spiritual flexibility that seamlessly coexists with the modern secular world, fortifying us through life's inevitable ups and downs. We are all subject to forces beyond our control, but we are also part of a bigger natural system that can strengthen us-if we learn how to reconnect with it"--Provided by publisher.

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