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Lessons of Life

Making Peace with My Money

by Ari Koinuma on Mar.06, 2010, under Ari's Diary, Ari's Vision, Lessons of Life, Our Best Version, The Joy of Being on the Way

I used to hate money.

It’s because it was so painful to make them.

I really resented how I needed it.  Making money was such a difficult, excruciating process that I longed to just get rid of the whole monetary system.

Did I mention that I’m a Star Trek fan? ;-)

Well, nowadays, I’m making my more peace with money.  It didn’t happen over night, there are still tensions in our relationship. We’re working our kinks out.

But you know what’s funny?  As I traded jobs (and I had many) to the ones I liked better, so did my pay.

Of course, I like jobs that pay well.  But I have turned down jobs that paid more, because I didn’t like what I had to do.  So it’s not entirely true that I like my job simply because it pays better, though that’s part of it.

The job I have now rocks.  I love it, and that’s saying something because I’ve been there like 6 months now.  Usually by now, I start getting bored or tired of it.  (The longest I lasted at a job was 2.5 years.  But it was way too long — I was fired at the end, because I was so unmotivated to work by then)

I still think that we can eventually exchange our currency and capitalism for a system that’s better.  But I can see how humanity’s not ready for that yet.

So I am making my peace with money.

I hope you can, too.

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TweetDeck: A Reconciling Force

by Ari Koinuma on Mar.05, 2010, under Lessons of Life, Our Best Version

I was very happy when I recently discovered that Tweetdeck can post updates on four major social networking sites — Facebook, MySpace, Twitter and LinkedIn.

And they are exactly the top four sites in my world!  Finally, someone agrees with me.  ;-)

It is such a joy to have a tool that brings together these separate entities.  I am just thrilled.

Then I thought of how it serves as a metaphor for a larger theme.

A reconciling force.

Most of us belong to multiple communities, or have multi-faceted life.  Work and home, for example.  They are both big part of you, both very important, they require your TLC (tender loving care).

Do they intermingle, though?

Not always.  Seldom for me, personally. They are completely separate and segregated, and they rarely cross paths.

But I don’t know if I like that complete, unbridgeable separation.  Sure, I like healthy separation between work and home, not saying there shouldn’t be.

But I’d like for them to intersect once in a while, too.  I’d love for my wife to see me at work, for example.  I’d love to have her see how I interact with my colleagues, how I do good work that I feel proud of and my peers respect and rely on me.  And similarly, I’d love to show off my family to my colleagues, because I have a beautiful family that I just love dearly and feel immensely proud of.

Why not, right?

MySpaces and Facebooks in the world are separate, independent entities for a good reason.  They each have their personalities and strengths, their own set of innovations.  Innovation is very closely related to the act of staking a claim — reaching, conquering a piece of land still unclaimed and saying “this is mine!”

And that is an admirable act, to be encouraged and applauded.

But once the areas are claimed and major entities are established — and they engage in healthy (hopefully) competition in the process — I think there needs to be a force to reconcile their differences.  Bridge the gap.  Because they do leave gaps between them.

A force that allows these divergent entities to co-exist together.

So that each can be who they are, their differences are not nullified — but they don’t divide us, either.  We all get inter-connected.

And you can see parallels all over the place.  Unitarianism tries to reconcile major religions.  UN tries to reconcile the nations.  We have a system in place to exchange between different currencies, so we’re not stuck in one community.

And that’s great.  As Covey would put it, that’s moving from independence to interdependence. It’s a healthy and natural evolution.

A reconciling force.  I quite welcome it, because I need more of it.

Wouldn’t you?

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The Key to Good Decisions

by Ari Koinuma on Mar.04, 2010, under Lessons of Life, Our Best Version

A simple principle I’m trying to apply to my decision-making is “which way is going to feel better afterwards?”

In the other words, I’m tuning into my imagination to see whether I feel proud of the decision later.

Feelings are great indicators of my state of being.  If I’m tired, I’d be unmotivated or move attracted to easier choices.

But it’s often not the indicator of which way I should choose.  If the path of quick, instant gratification appeals, I have to seriously question that leaning.

Because I don’t often feel good about it later.

It’s better to feel good later than now — as long as you don’t do it to the extent of totally suffocating yourself.  I’m not saying you shouldn’t take a break or get a relief.

But delayed gratification is where it’s at.

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Soul Searching for What I Have to Give

by Ari Koinuma on Feb.21, 2010, under Ari's Diary, Ari's Manifesto, Ari's Vision, Lessons of Life, Music Career, Music Industry, Our Best Version, Self Sufficient Musician, The Joy of Being on the Way

Heart vs. Ego

I’m reading a book called The Deeper Secret by Annemarie Postma.  I’m not even half way yet, but it has made me think of some good things.

The issue on my mind right now is the idea of Ego Intention vs. Heart Intention.  Both are powerful and you can rely on it to drive your actions.

But she argues that in the end, they both reproduce itself.  Create out of ego and you get more ego.  The same goes for the heart.

The most illuminating part, to me, is the chart below:

Heart Ego
Love Fear
Faith Mistrust
Love of Truth Need for Well-Being
Generous Narrow-Minded
Abundance Lack
Free Needy
Non-Attached Attached
Freedom Limitation
Stillness Restlessness
Giving Taking
Flexible Rigid
Open Closed
Developing Peace Controlling through Violence
Self-Conquest Self-Defense
Service Self-Interest
Working Anonymously Chasing Fame
Looking for Solution Fighting Problems

Whoa! I don’t know about you but I can plainly see that my pursuit of music so far has been very heavily Ego-driven and it’s probably safe to say that most of music/artistic/business pursuits are driven by Ego.

(I should clarify that I am using her use of the word Ego here — I know Ego can mean something more healthy, like having a secure and well-developed sense of self.  So don’t get hung up on semantics)

And that’s one of the reasons why I haven’t been able to get 100% behind my own musical pursuit.  It’s selfish! I just couldn’t figure out how my being just another rock guitarist/artist would make the world a better place.  Of course, I have nobler philanthropic ambitions that are lined up after I were to achieve fame and fortune…;-)  but really, no.  I can’t go around saying “well, you guys ought to listen/buy my music, ‘coz it’s good and I’m a good guy….”

I’m not saying that being driven by Ego is doomed to failure.  But I am saying that I couldn’t get behind my own Ego, and I also can’t see that had I even gotten behind it, I wouldn’t have felt fulfilled by what I achieved.

What Do I Have to Offer?

Self, then, what is it that I can really get behind?

Well, a nobler cause.  I like ones that are so universal that it’s undisputable.  Like Doctors without Borders.  They respond to crisis by providing for medical needs, and won a Noble Peace Prize.  Must be a good, believable cause, right?

Then I thought of other things I feel energized about.  I get excited about people pursuing genuine artistic ambitions. Like musicians who sing because they can’t live without doing it, or filmmakers who make films because they just have the burning desire to tell their story.  When people are doing things because they cannot NOT do it.

But even that seems a bit too safe, like I’m really lying to myself.  It’s like I’m saying I don’t have anything good to offer so I’m just latching onto others who have better offerings.

No.

I do have something to offer.  Quite a few, actually.  I am a great problem-solver and consultant.  I am intuitive and I can cut through muck and identify the essence.  I am very creative and can think outside of box.  I am loyal and reliable, resourceful and quick-study.  I am happy to be in demand as a web developer — because even though there are many of us out there, apparently when people work with me they want to work with me again and again.  And it’s a line of work where much of what I list above are being used.  I like being useful.

But I am developing web sites because other people want me to and it makes me money.  It really doesn’t fulfill me in a more fundamental way.  I can think to volunteer as a web developer to some charitable causes that I can believe in, and I may do that, but even that feels like a cop-out.

I want to feel fulfilled in my life.  When I die, I want to look back to my life and feel proud — and as much as my web sites help other people and make money, they don’t make me proud in a deep way.

Then I thought about why I wanted to make music to begin with.

It’s because music was the friend that helped me get through my dark times.

It is the most moving, touching thing in the world to me, when I listen to music that express the feelings I am carrying inside.

Music is the best gift I’ve been given.  And that’s why, I dreamed of giving it.

Separating the Heart from the Rest

When I think of being given opportunities to create meaningful music, I feel overwhelmed, in a good way.  I’d feel incredibly grateful and honored.  If someone were to tell me my music helped them get through hard times, I’d be so overcome with joy that I’d probably kiss and hug the person and say something corny like “oh, THANK you for thanking me!” :-)

I think I have something here.  I feel like I can trust this feeling.

So I was right to begin with — but I got distracted by all the ego-energy that fills the air.  It’s been very awkward for me to try to be in the music industry.  I haven’t made many friends, never fit the lifestyle/social circles and I have been unsuccessful in applying some of the successful techniques to my own pursuit.

But to worry about stuff like The Industry, now I see, is missing the point of my intention.  I’m not saying I will not make money from music, but that’s really not the point.

I want to offer the most meaningful thing that’s been given to me.  I want to give back.

But to give back, first I need to develop the ability to create the same caliber of gifts that I received.  Not because I need fame, not because I want to turn profit — but because I want to make an impact.  It has to be a genuine piece of art, or otherwise it can’t meet my true objective.

So that’s my starting point.

Then, I just have to think of a way, an approach, that’ll keep Ego out of the picture as much as possible.  Again, I’m not saying that Ego-driven pursuit is a mortal sin or recipe for failure — it’s just that when it enters the picture, I can’t get behind it.  It stops being fulfilling — and thus, it misses the very reason why I want to create it.

Making an Impact => My Fulfillment

That’s my focus, and I need to affix my eyes on it.

I have a lot more thinking to do, but I feel like I’m onto something.  At last.

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It’s Easy to Love the Developed, but It’s Better to Develop Because You Love

by Ari Koinuma on Feb.05, 2010, under Ari's Diary, Development Diary, Lessons of Life, Musicianship, Our Best Version, Self Sufficient Musician, The Joy of Being on the Way, Thoughtful Web

Today is a day to celebrate.  We finally launched the film web site I’ve been working on for the last 6 month.

Ladies and gentlemen, drum roll please…. LostInSunshine.com!

It’s a brainchild of the writer/director Jentri Chancey and producer Lorie Marsh.  And kudos also go to the web designer Shad Chancey, who did the graphic design for the site.

I am very grateful to be involved in this project for many reasons.  I think what the filmmakers are trying to do with this web site is very forward-thinking — I mean, grassroots DIY thing has been done among bloggers, authors and musicians.  Filmmakers have done it, too — but most of the cases so far have been unintentional successes.  They didn’t set out to market and sell their films that way.  But with LIS, they are totally going at it on their own, with the intention to create an online community around the film by using net-based tools.

I learned a ton from this project myself — I would never been motivated enough to really sit down and master Drupal (content management system) if I didn’t have to, but now that I’m neck deep into it, I’m amazed by Drupal’s sheer power and flexibility.

Launching a web site is always a proud moment, but I’m particularly proud of this one.

All that being said — I was thinking tonight about how proud I feel of my latest web creation, but I also imagined how I’d feel if I was releasing a new CD, and if it was selling…..

I’d be way up on cloud nine then.

You see, I love making web sites, and I love the fact that I am in demand, my peers respect me and I get paid handsomely for it.  It’s hard not to like something you’re good at.

But it’s even better, if you become good at something you love.

That’s the ideal, that’s what we should all aspire to do.  You make yourself learn and grow, because you love it.

And that’s what I want to do.  I’m not yet as developed as a musician as I am a web developer.  But I still am more musician than web developer.

And that’s OK.  I’m making what I love grow, too.  It’s just taking a bit longer, because it’s bigger.

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5 Things You Can Do While You Wait for Your Remarkableness to Arrive

by Ari Koinuma on Jan.26, 2010, under Ari's Vision, Lessons of Life, Music Career, Our Best Version, Self Sufficient Musician, The Joy of Being on the Way

So, I still feel like a man who hasn’t quite “arrived” yet. My time, which always seems like it’s just around the corner, still remains in the future.  Though it always seems like it’s getting closer — I don’t know if it’s true, but it certainly gives me hopes.

Perhaps you are in the same boat as I am.  With a head full of (possibly) great ideas, a mind full of “Not Quite Sure What Good It’s For” talents, and a heart full of hope and yearning, we sit and wait for the wee little selves to mature.  I feel like I’m still tilling the ground — I have built some stuff, not sure if any of them are going to eventually add to my foundation on which I’m going to blossom.  Or perhaps I am already beginning to bloom.  I have many things I’m super excited about right now.  It’s often hard to assess exactly where you are.

Regardless, maturation is a process you can work hard on but can’t quite rush.  While we wait for our Remarkableness to arrive, there are a few things we can be doing to pass time productively, even if they aren’t exactly contributing to making the fruition come sooner.

  1. Discover and engage your bliss.  What do you do on your day off?  When you don’t have any responsibilities?  What gives you energy?  I like to read about boutique guitar pedals.  My wife browse through educational supply catalogs.  (She’s an education geek and homeschools our children)  Bliss, I hear, is a gateway to your Remarkableness.  Plus, it’s pretty darn fun.
  2. Confirm what you shouldn’t be doing. (It’s called Experimenting)  There are many things to do in life and many of them sound good, though most are not right for you.  For example, if you are a musician and reading up on the latest promotional tactics — if any of them sound good to you, make you wonder if you should be doing them — just dip your toe in and try it out.  But be completely open to being a quitter and getting out if it’s not fun or if it drains you somehow.  It’s good to confirm the things you shouldn’t be doing, so you have less things to wonder about.
  3. Take detours.  If you have a hunch that your Remarkableness involves something having to do with being online, stay off of it and do something completely different.  Why?  Because, once your Remarkableness arrives, you’ll be doing it all the time.  You’ll be immersed in it.  Nothing wrong with that at all, just that after that happens, you may be short of time to do other things.  Enjoy a different life while you can — especially if you know that working hard isn’t going to speed up the arrival of Your Time.
  4. Talk to people.  Ask them what they do and what they think about what they do.  Is that person Remarkable or if not, where in lies their potential to be Remarkable?  We learn a lot by talking and listening to other people.
  5. Do nothing. Finally, you should do nothing.  NOTHING.  Being occupied doesn’t make you Remarkable — in fact, it can be quite detrimental.  If it feels like you’re working hard, then slow down until that feeling is gone.  Being Remarkable will feel like you’re playing, not working.  It’ll be so fun that you’ll do it even if you’re not getting paid or rewarded or recognized.

There, Ari, 5 things you can do while you’re waiting for your remarkableness.  Do you do any of them?

Well, I do some, though not all.  I’ve done #2 a lot, I’ve done some of #1 and #4, but I’ve been so stubborn to really engage in #3 and #5.  I guess I still haven’t completely unlearned the notion that hard work is the key to success.

I really need to play more.

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Freeing Myself of Deadlines

by Ari Koinuma on Jan.20, 2010, under Ari's Diary, Ari's Manifesto, Lessons of Life, The Joy of Being on the Way

Recently I had a deep conversation with my wife, which led to some revelations.  I realized that I was setting myself up some deadlines because I believed that I wouldn’t get anything done without them.

Actually, the opposite is true here:  if something requires a deadline to get done, then that something isn’t something I want to center my life around.

Don’t get me wrong, I still have plenty of deadlines and I am good at honoring them.  But with it comes stress, scheming, and the need to be efficient. And you know, efficiency isn’t a synonym of effectiveness or fun.

I am self-motivated and driven.  I’m lazy only when I’m overwhelmed or tired. I don’t have problem getting things done.

So if something requires a deadline to get done, then that’s not something I really want.

Oh, I will still play my guitar and make music.  But how and when that will happen — I have no idea, except that they will get done when they have to.

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Things Are Not “Should Be.” Things “Are.”

by Ari Koinuma on Dec.29, 2009, under Ari's Diary, Lessons of Life, Our Best Version, The Joy of Being on the Way

Today I felt frustrated.   Frustration comes when things are not what they Should Be.  I feel indignant because of that gap between Should Be and Are.

Then I had to stop.  Things Are the way they Are for a reason.  One of those reasons is that the present situation is an Opportunity to Learn a Lesson I Have Not Learned Yet.

Think about it.  If you had figured out how to solve a problem, then you will not have that problem any more.  The situation will not contain that problem, because you can solve it even if it comes up — and chances are, you’re probably even preventing it from coming up.

For example, when I first came to US I had a communication problem.  People could not understand my odd and accented English, and I couldn’t understand slang-filled American English.  But now I’ve been here 17 years.  I don’t have that problem any more.

The problems I do have are the ones I haven’t figured out yet.  And they just stay in my reality, waiting for me to figure them out.  I try one solution after another, and they keep coming back, because I really haven’t nailed yet.  Stuff like cleanliness and organization, I still struggle with.  So I keep finding myself in messes, most of which, I create myself.

Life just doesn’t give up on me.  It patiently waits and repeats itself, until I really figure it out for good.  It’s up to me to interpret that as either frustrating, or thankful.  Thankful for the Nth chances it gives me.

Things aren’t what they should be, for a good reason.  Thanks for giving me another try.

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Reducing a Vision to Its Essence

by Ari Koinuma on Dec.28, 2009, under Ari's Manifesto, Ari's Vision, Lessons of Life, Our Best Version, The Joy of Being on the Way

I often think of why it’s taken me so long to realize my dream.  I’ve been wanting to be a musician virtually all my adult life, yet I seem to be everything but.

Now, notice the last sentence: “I’ve been wanting to be a musician.”

What does that mean, to BE a musician.  Are you a musician when you have a degree in it?   When you publish a song or a composition?  When you earn money from performing music?  When you don’t have a day job?

Well, I know what my definition was, but now I see that there is a problem here.  I’ve been just focusing on a status, a certain condition I wanted to create.  Which takes the focus away from the very essence of what I’ve always wanted to do.

Why did I want what I wanted, to begin with?

It’s because music meant to much to me.  In my darkest times, music reached out and filled me.  It was an outlet, one faucet attached to the ever-growing tank of rotting muck.  Through its exorcism, I found strength to go on.

And because it gripped me so powerfully, I felt passionate about giving back.  To create music that would offer the same kind of healing catharsis. To create music that finally articulate all the hurt, insecurities, shame, guilt and despair we carry hidden deep inside.  To make music that really channel the depth and the complexity of our darkest emotions — an expression that’s thoroughly realistic and authentic, without a shred of caricaturing or over-simplifying.

That’s what I want to do.

See?  That vision has nothing, really nothing to do with being a musician.  I mean, I already am a musician.  I do not need to change or achieve anything in order for me to start doing the above.  Today, this very moment, I have what it takes to do what I want to do and give it everything I got.  There is now waiting, no need for approval permission.

Yet, for so many years, it was really not about music.  It was about status, about proving something.  I wanted to validate myself, make my desire to make music legitimate by turning it into a recognizable success.

And I’ve been wondering why I make so much more money as a web developer, and doors and opportunities open so easily for me in that avenue, with people clamoring, asking me to do that.  Well, the following lines from The Deeper Secret by Annemarie Postma really articulates what’s going on here:

You are given the things to which you do not attach your ego.  When you free yourself of neediness, then you are ready to receive.

My true vision has nothing to do with achieving anything.  It’s about creating to give.  Yes, it will be nice if it somehow turned into a situation where I don’t have to work other jobs, so I can devote more time to it.  But that’s really not the point.  And yes, it’ll be nice if I get recognized for the excellence in creating music.  But that’s really not the point, either.  The more I focus on the essence of my heart’s desire, the more I lose interest in these accessorial benefits.  And the more I feel amazed that I actually have everything I need to start living my dream today, this very moment.

For such a long, long time, I kept myself from doing it, thinking I needed to meet other conditions.

All I needed, all along, was simply to tear down the wall I had put up myself.

The wait is now over.  My time has arrived.

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Changing Too Many Things at Once

by Ari Koinuma on Dec.15, 2009, under Ari's Diary, Lessons of Life, Our Best Version, Thoughtful Guitarist

I love guitar gear as much as the next guitarist, and every so often I go through this upgrade phase — trying out new pieces to see if it improves my rig.

But experimenting takes time and money, and it seems that every time I get a bit overzealous — in search of improvements, I lose sight of things that are actually working well.

This last week, I made a mistake of trying 3 new things at once.  I changed to a different brand of strings, swapped all 3 pickups of my main Strat, and bought a new (to me) overdrive pedal.  The latter of which isn’t a problem, but switching both strings and pickups at the same time was a mistake.  It obviously changed my tone but I couldn’t tell which contributed to what!  To make the matter worse I don’t have any left of my old brand of strings.

Once again, my current lesson pops into my mind.  If you are in a hurry, go take the long way.  I should have changed one thing at a time, so I could evaluate accurately what I think of them.

Life keeps hammering this point in me, because I’m just not learning the lesson.  Sigh. How much of a stonehead am I?

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