c/nine
Japanese sushi masters and American skateboarders don't appear in the same conversation very often. One tradition is ancient, formal, wrapped in centuries of Zen philosophy. The other is young, loud, and invented in empty swimming pools. But when you look at what is actually happening inside the person doing the work, both traditions converge on the same strange experience: the self gets quiet, the ego dissolves, the practice takes over. This episode traces that convergence from Jiro Ono's seventy-five years at the sushi counter through the Japanese concept of shokunin, through Rodney Mullen falling for a year to invent a trick, through Laird Hamilton riding waves too big to paddle into, and into the uncomfortable question of what happens when the market shows up and tries to sell the self back to a practice that was supposed to erase it.
2 episodios
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