DAILY PHOTO: Bull

Image

Photograph of a Brahma Bull taken near Mussoorie in Uttarakhand, India.

PROMPT: Instantly

Daily writing prompt
If you could instantly master any skill, what would it be and why?

What would be the fun in that? It’s the journey that makes skill development enjoyable and interesting. I’m not interested in downloadable skills. (I’ll leave them to the robots.)

Dripping Blossom [Haiku]

Photograph of a pink and orange flower taken in Mussoorie, Uttarakhand, India.
droplets drip 
from the bottom petal,
after the rain.

Misty Mountain [Haiku]

Photograph of mushroom caps among lichens and leaves, taken in the mountains near Mussoorie, Uttarakhand, India.
in misty mountains,
tiny fungi bloom amid
lichens and mosses.

DAILY PHOTO: Dutch Square, Melaka

Photograph of Stadthuys and Christ Church Melaka (i.e. Dutch Square) in Malacca, Malaysia.
Photograph of Stadthuys and Christ Church Melaka (i.e. Dutch Square) in Malacca, Malaysia.
Closeup photograph of Christ Church Melaka on Dutch Square in Malacca, Malaysia.

PROMPT: Grown

Daily writing prompt
What is one way you have grown this year?

Horizontally.

Jungle Entropy [Senryū]

Photograph taken on Bukit Cina in Malacca, Malaysia.
the jungle wants to 
hide, then eat, whatever
humans build in it.

BOOK: “Shuhari” by Nobuo Suzuki

Shuhari: The Three-Step Japanese Path to Lifelong Growth and SuccessShuhari: The Three-Step Japanese Path to Lifelong Growth and Success by Nobuo Suzuki
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Release date: August 11, 2026

I was introduced to the concept of “shuhari” as a student of Japanese martial arts, and over time I discovered it to be one of the most useful concepts for personal growth and development. Shuhari is by no means exclusive to martial arts and is applied to arts in the broadest sense — really to endeavors of any type (as is true in this book which references not only martial arts, but literary arts, graphic arts, cinematic art, and even sciences.) The idea is this: one begins by repetitively practicing what one is taught in as close to an exemplary fashion as possible (shu,) then one starts adapting the principles one has cultivated to changing and unpredictable circumstances (ha,) and finally one abandons the forms and embraces the spontaneous (ri.) In short, we follow the rules (shu,) break the rules (ha,) and abandon the rules (ri.)

Recent years have seen a flood of books on cultural life philosophies, starting and continuing with those of the Japanese culture, but venturing out into Scandinavian (Sisu and Lagom,) Goan (Susegad,) and many others. One could easily fill a shelf each with the popular books on “ikigai” or “ganbatte.” It’s kind of a surprise to see that it’s taken this long to venture into the invaluable concept of “Shuhari.” It is an idea whose time has come to go global.

In a broad sense, this is a book on learning and creativity, and I’d highly recommend it for anyone looking to reevaluate their approach to learning and / or creating.

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BOOK: “Saiweng Lost His Horse” [塞翁失马] by Qixia Yu

Saiweng Lost His Horse 塞翁失马: A Story about Life and Values (Bilingual Chinese Idiom Stories)Saiweng Lost His Horse 塞翁失马: A Story about Life and Values by Qixia Yu
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Author Amazon Page

This bilingual illustrated book tells the famous Taoist story often referred to as “good news? bad news? who’s to say?” (or words to that effect.) The story, originally contained in the Huainanzi (i.e. The Book of Master Huainan,) shows a wise old farmer subjected to the ups and downs of life. The old man’s neighbors are always surprised when the farmer neither celebrates positive events or bemoans negative ones — realizing the truth contained in the taiji symbol (yin / yang symbol) that the seed of the light is always in the dark and vice versa.

The book contains text in Simplified Chinese, pinyin, and English. It also has pretty illustrations. It’s very kid’s book-like (i.e. short, illustrated, and formatted as such;) though the story, itself, is not particularly juvenile.

I was surprised when this would not open on my laptop “Kindle for PC” reader as another book in this series had. (I like to read illustrated works (and Chinese writings) that way as it’s generally easier to take in than on my phone or Kindle because the big screen is easy to see and enlarge as necessary. That said, I was quite pleased with the ease with which I could magnify the text on my Kindle device. I had none of the frustration reading it on Kindle that I frequently have had with graphic novels and such in the past.

I enjoyed reading this story and found it quite helpful to me as a Chinese language learner. I’d highly recommend it for those learning to read Chinese.

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DAILY PHOTO: Gates of Lucknow

Photograph of an old city gate in Lucknow, India.
Photograph of the Bailley Guard Gate at Kaiser Bagh in Lucknow, India.
Photograph of a Gate on Husainabad Trust Road near the Chota Imambada in Lucknow.
Gate on Husainabad Trust Road between the Rumi Darwaza and the Chota Imambada.
Photograph of a gate near Shah Najaf Imambara Sher in Lucknow, India.