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Examples
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But his family says if you take away his fishing, then you take away his ikigai, a Japanese word that means "reason for living."
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But his family says if you take away his fishing, then you take away his ikigai, a Japanese word that means "reason for living."
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Women in Okinawa also tend to be spiritual leaders, which imbues them with a sense of purpose, or "ikigai," Buettner said.
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The Blue Zone citizens all move their bodies regularly, they have built ingrained social rituals that create space to decompress and downshift regularly, they have developed the intellectual constructs and vocabulary to articulate purpose in life (see the concept of ikigai, literally translated as "what gets you up in the morning" from Okinawa).
Daniel Cook: The Architecture of Collective Intelligence: Blue Zones & Yoga Nutrition 2010
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The Blue Zone citizens all move their bodies regularly, they have built ingrained social rituals that create space to decompress and downshift regularly, they have developed the intellectual constructs and vocabulary to articulate purpose in life (see the concept of ikigai, literally translated as "what gets you up in the morning" from Okinawa).
Daniel Cook: The Architecture of Collective Intelligence: Blue Zones & Yoga Nutrition Daniel Cook 2010
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On Okinawa people say “hara hachi bu” — “eat until you are 80 percent full”; and “ikigai” — “the reason for waking up in the morning.”
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On Okinawa people say “hara hachi bu” — “eat until you are 80 percent full”; and “ikigai” — “the reason for waking up in the morning.”
Archive 2008-07-01 2008
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In Okinawa, it's ikigai, this sense of purpose, the reason for which they wake up in the morning that sort of propels them through -- through -- into their 100s in many cases.
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In Okinawa, it's ikigai, this sense of purpose, the reason for which they wake up in the morning that sort of propels them through -- through -- into their 100s in many cases.
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In interviews with policy experts, businesspeople, service providers and civic activists, the priority that kept coming up was ikigai, which translates as "life worth living."
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