from Kosei
May 2016
Developing Your Own Distinctive Traits
Very Much Like Oden
It may be a little out of season, but whenever I hear the term “distinctive traits” I am
somehow reminded of the popular Japanese cold-weather dish oden, in which a variety of ingredients are
simmered together in savory stock in a single pot. The ingredients usually include sliced daikon radish,
deep-fried tofu, hard-boiled eggs, and others that would be unfamiliar to most non-Japanese. Cooking
together in the one pot, the various items bring out the special flavor of each as they develop their
own distinctive traits. I think the pot of oden is similar to society in general and our individual
lifestyles.
Incidentally, when we speak of distinctive traits or personality what we mean in many cases are the
outstanding talents or strengths of an individual. Of course, those may be worth special attention. But
if that is all we have in mind, then we would also be saying that people who have no exceptional talent
also have no distinctive traits or personality. Some people do not know what their own distinctive
traits are. They lack self-confidence and suffer from low personal esteem. Many of them may be overly
concerned about their perceived lack of distinctive personality traits, and think about this
obsessively.
As I am also someone who has worried considerably over finding the answer to the question, “What
am I?” I can well understand how it feels to be frustrated and troubled by this. However, while
realizing your own distinctive traits can certainly be difficult, you might not be able to determine
them even if you shut yourself alone in a room and ponder the subject.
If you really want to know yourself, I think it is good to get out and interact with other people, such
as enjoying some physical activity together. In that way you can find something that you genuinely like
doing and can feel confident about. In other words, your distinctive traits are revealed through various
encounters.
Let us return to the discussion of oden. None of the ingredients in the dish has a very strong flavor or
aroma. They are rather plain. But after they have been simmered together in the same pot, the fish
cake’s fluffy texture comes to life, the daikon radish’s tart sweetness is drawn out, and
each ingredient’s distinctive traits and what we might call their personality are developed. We
could say that each of them has distinctive traits that are in large part revealed by the interaction in
the oden pot.
The Savory Stock Is Decisive
Fumiko Hama (b. 1945) has written a poem called “The Flower in the Field.” It reads:
“Simply standing there, / It gives rest to an insect. / Simply swaying there, / It releases its
fragrance. / When the wind blows, / Its seeds scatter. / One leaf, one flower, / Living / In one fixed
place. / And inside that ring of petals, / Is the full circle of life / Of the flower. / All the more so
with people— / Simply being a friend is happiness. / Simply being a parent is noble. / Simply
being a child is a source of gratitude. / Simply being a husband, / And simply being a wife, / Is
touching.”
We are like the flower described, not only in our innate abilities but in the fact that just by existing
we are already developing our distinctive traits—and this is true of each and every one of us.
Through this realization, not only regarding your own self-esteem, but when you consider other people,
too, you will be able to have the rich perspective of knowing that simply being a friend equals
happiness.
This is not merely a technique, such as regarding someone’s weaknesses as strengths, but rather
genuine praise for someone as a person of consequence who has weaknesses as well as strengths, and a
warm regard that supports that person’s whole being. In the end, your distinctive traits are,
ultimately, produced by your own nature and therefore, the fact that you already have eyes and a mind
that allow you to see things honestly is, I think, one of the distinctive traits intrinsic to us as
human beings. Engaging in bodhisattva practices without self-interest for the sake of society and of
other people is also a distinctive trait that we can develop ourselves. An image something like this
comes to my mind: our distinctive trait of showing consideration for others absorbs the essence of the
savory stock from the pot of society and brings out its fully profound human flavor.
I think that in this sense, the decisive factors that bring out the distinctive traits of ourselves and
other people are like the savory stock in the pot. It is made up of our brightness, our kindness, and
our warmth. However, in order to ensure that the stock is always well seasoned, we must never forget to
be diligent each and every day.