SIT Short Documentary Film

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  • Опубликовано: 25 янв 2025
  • A film about purpose in life, seen through the eyes of a Buddhist monk and his son.
    Director//Yoko Okumura - yokookumura.com
    Producer//Christopher Ruiz
    Cinematographer//Bennett Cerf - bennettcerf.com
    Editors//Yoko Okumura & Steve Pristin - stevenpristin.com
    Sound Design//Patrick Janssen - patjanssen.com
    Music// Ken Christianson//Derde Verde - ken4397.wixsite.com/pere // derdeverde.bandcamp.com
    Featuring//
    Shohaku Okumura - sanshinji.org
    Yuko Okumura - ichigotofu.weebly.com
    Masaki Okumura
    suzuproductions.com
    copyright Yoko Okumura 2016

Комментарии • 94

  • @raphaelcarvalhobezerra6913
    @raphaelcarvalhobezerra6913 3 года назад +13

    Im a 15 year old buddhist from Brazil. I never met another buddhist. I never went to a temple. No one of my family except me is buddhist. I found refuge on the Three Jewels
    Im now 18 and im finally going to a buddhist retreat! Its going to be an entire month of learning and practicing the Dharma

    • @elielsandoval.author
      @elielsandoval.author 11 месяцев назад +1

      I feel identified with your story, I’m from Puerto Rico I’m 40 now and Buddhist, I started the Buddhist path when I was in my 20s, never being to a temple, never met a Buddhist and no one in my family except me is Buddhist. Keep up with your practice and I hope you reach enlightenment and nirvana 🙏

  • @bradcox2579
    @bradcox2579 5 лет назад +34

    I am a Zen Buddhist from Indiana and I think that mini documentary was absolutely amazing. Even if I was not a Zen Buddhist, I would still think that it was absolutely amazing. It touched my heart very deeply.

  • @michaelh2935
    @michaelh2935 3 месяца назад

    I think often about Shohaku's comments on heart to heart transmission in silence, it really is a beautiful and inspiring sentiment.

  • @bornimusic
    @bornimusic 5 месяцев назад

    This is so beautiful, meaningful and touching. Thank you 🙏🏾📿🙇🏾‍♂️

  • @believewithyourheart5627
    @believewithyourheart5627 2 года назад +5

    This is beautiful! A sisters love for her brother, a Fathers love for ‘the way’ a brothers honest struggle..... finding a path.... spacious and touching.... heart to heart communication! :) a beautiful creation!

  • @davejs95
    @davejs95 3 года назад +8

    Yoko, I found your mini documentary and was enthralled. Visually and artistically, each shot was a pleasure to watch. The story was universal. I come from a family that did the opposite of your gentle Mom and Dad. The expectations to live for my parents honor were paramount. You quickly set up the conflict. You have a spiritually minded Father and Mother who believe that attachment to desire is the root of suffering applies even to the natural desire that our kids “grow up”. There is a point in a child’s life where loving them is allowing them to become who they are. Obviously, you don’t do this to children. I could feel immediate judgement of the seemingly permissive parenting style. I was rooting for the son to leave the nest. It turns out, sometimes the adage “Don’t just sit there, do something!” Should be rearranged to “Don’t do something, just sit there!” There is wisdom and strength exhibited when we stop interfering. Maybe nagging parents would have delayed your brother’s journey.
    Thank you for this gift. I am sorry I am seeing it so late.
    Sincerely,
    Dr Dave

  • @Pompomnguyen
    @Pompomnguyen 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for making and sharing this . Great story and production as well ❤

  • @jia712
    @jia712 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for this video. I’m not a Buddhist but watching it reaffirmed my belief that there is no one best way to live and that everything comes with tradeoffs. The best we can do is to balance them. Desire might cause suffering but having no desire can also cause suffering.
    As with Okumura’s quote about needing to go out into the world to live life, as an outsider it seems Buddhist teachings are more applicable when we have already experienced the stress, anxiety and depression of focusing too much work, on the future and/or the past.

    • @R_Priest
      @R_Priest 4 месяца назад

      Having "no desire" is not the buddhist way. The point is to avoid "egoic desire" and have desire borne of "great love", ie, "Bodhisattva love." Buddhsits should be passionate, goal oriented, and energetic, but motivated by "correct mind" and "correct heart." Indifference is falling into nihilism. The buddhist should be 100% content with right here, right now, but also 100% moved to "save all beings from suffering."

  • @aldobhary173
    @aldobhary173 5 лет назад +15

    I found this film and this film inspired me a lot.

  • @cherecross7731
    @cherecross7731 6 лет назад +21

    This is absolutely wonderful! I am so impressed...deeply moving. Excellent work, beautiful movie. Thank you

  • @aaronyork3995
    @aaronyork3995 4 года назад +11

    Awww. Yoko i love this. Im a youngish soto practicioner. This touches me deeply. My love to you and your family. In the suchness. Aaron York, Vermont

    • @aaronyork3995
      @aaronyork3995 4 года назад +2

      Is your bro happy? Your family is very Kawaii! You are very kawaii to!🙏🌷🙏 my sensai knows your dad. Her name is Taihaku. Shao Shan temple in Vermont. Stay peaceful now!!🌸

  • @haplesslee1275
    @haplesslee1275 3 месяца назад

    thanks for making this! beautifully made

  • @MattTenney
    @MattTenney 5 лет назад +11

    This is beautiful! Thanks so much for creating such a lovely film. Finding the balance between inner peace and adding value in the "real world" is a life-long opportunity for growth.

  • @mcgee227
    @mcgee227 4 года назад +2

    When I was 20 my father sit me down one day and said okay bud this is it. I found you an apartment you can have the old furniture in the basement. Have a nice life.

    • @Bellg
      @Bellg 4 года назад +7

      An apartment AND furniture? sounds like a sweet deal to me

  • @trirepetae3258
    @trirepetae3258 3 года назад +1

    I like how in the very very last second of the film the bird and the fish finally understand what the sky and the ocean are like & what this world is about, and become great masters.

  • @diogocastroferreira3343
    @diogocastroferreira3343 Год назад

    Really good doc👌

  • @missmatic2624
    @missmatic2624 3 года назад +1

    Very interesting. Mr Okumara had too much expectation and wanted freedom, yet his son felt like there was not enough....

  • @thatdarncash
    @thatdarncash 6 лет назад +22

    This was awesome. As a casual fan of Okumura's work this was a delightful find. Beautifully shot and edited too!

  • @3340steve
    @3340steve Год назад

    BEAUTIFUL ART stuff thank you for sharing this

  • @elielsandoval.author
    @elielsandoval.author 11 месяцев назад

    Very peaceful, beautiful and lovely family, this is a short but very amazing film

  • @daishugyo
    @daishugyo 7 лет назад +4

    Oh, this was lovely!!!! Master Okumura is a man I admire and I can't help but be impressed by his all around peacefulness. His family is lovely as well. Might not be traditional in every way, but everyone is finding their way! Loved this short documentary. Thanks for sharing.

  • @a.s3359
    @a.s3359 2 года назад

    Awesome documentary! I stumbled across it because Brad Warner mentioned it in his book 'The Other Side of Nothing'.

  • @MrResearcher122
    @MrResearcher122 2 года назад

    Pops looks like a 18 year old Marine guard. His posture is bamboo-erect, his face like glinting gold, and he speaks serene sentences. Documentary made one think, and hungry. Son is blessed with a good family. Thanks.

  • @tonyrandall3146
    @tonyrandall3146 3 года назад +1

    Thanks, Yoko - you all seem smart and healthy and humbling to see your real problems of finding identity - I also think being a second-generation immigrant is a part of it but definitely not all. We have to make it ourselves and the harder we try the more original we are at least.

  • @robertforrester578
    @robertforrester578 2 года назад

    Plain old good work Fellas. I know the follow up film will be just as well done, Thanks from Philadelphia

  • @evidencemeso115
    @evidencemeso115 3 года назад +1

    Very touching, well realized, and very true.

  • @janechen007
    @janechen007 3 года назад +1

    incredibly moving. thank you for this.

  • @michaellendel1958
    @michaellendel1958 3 года назад

    Thank you very much! Amazing movie!

  • @belletwist
    @belletwist 3 года назад +1

    Beautiful.

  • @songsparrow4324
    @songsparrow4324 4 года назад

    Very beautiful...thank you for your quietness...and gentle manner.

  • @par11
    @par11 5 лет назад +2

    Beautifully done. Thank you for art 💙

  • @enterthevoidIi
    @enterthevoidIi 5 лет назад +2

    Great film! Thank you! I hope Masaki san has become a cook by now!

  • @maunashakti4905
    @maunashakti4905 3 года назад

    Oh darling, i get you & there are many of us .❤️

  • @mst2696
    @mst2696 6 лет назад +2

    What a beautiful story!
    I am deeply touched by the words, nature, sounds and yet above all: the messages within and beyond.
    Cheers & gasshō

  • @wishdokter
    @wishdokter 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you for sharing this story.

  • @nshwhdushdb397
    @nshwhdushdb397 5 лет назад +1

    Just beautiful..

  • @davidleemoveforlife6332
    @davidleemoveforlife6332 4 года назад +1

    Please make more films.

  • @sophiat9111
    @sophiat9111 3 года назад

    I just watched this beautiful film now and it made me tear up. heartwarming on so many levels :)

  • @henkskeukentafelshow9071
    @henkskeukentafelshow9071 2 года назад

    Loved this. Thank you.

  • @larrydubec2259
    @larrydubec2259 4 года назад

    Great film. Thank you 🙏🏼

  • @analegat4908
    @analegat4908 4 года назад

    Thank you so much for this short movie. It is beautiful!

  • @zdravost
    @zdravost 4 года назад

    What a great film! Thanks!

  • @sanshinzencommunity
    @sanshinzencommunity 5 лет назад

    For more videos of Shohaku Okumura, check out his temple's RUclips channel here: ruclips.net/user/sanshinzencommunity

  • @luiscruz2597
    @luiscruz2597 5 лет назад +1

    Love! Such a wonderful film, thank you for creating and sharing for the rest of us to enjoy! In gassho

  • @widderke
    @widderke 4 года назад

    Great job! Very very well done...

  • @richardkollmar903
    @richardkollmar903 5 лет назад +2

    Just life, immeasurable life! Namu Amidabu!

  • @andjunglepunkthirteen760
    @andjunglepunkthirteen760 5 лет назад +2

    That was beautiful, thank you!

  • @adogcalledchester
    @adogcalledchester 5 лет назад

    Beautiful film ..thankyou .........

  • @geenaee4772
    @geenaee4772 3 месяца назад

    Sadhu sadhu sadhu

  • @ElderEric
    @ElderEric Год назад

    The end is perfect.

  • @mokuho
    @mokuho 5 лет назад

    Beautiful film, i love japan, i love zen practice. 🙏

  • @mokuho
    @mokuho Год назад

    I was zen practitioner for 18 years but im sick of my kidneys and i can't continue practice in zen center...im sad , zen requires healthy condition...😢

  • @mazzreadstarot
    @mazzreadstarot 6 лет назад +2

    Bird. Fish.
    *Bows*
    Thank you all!!

  • @leradicideglialberi
    @leradicideglialberi 4 года назад

    Very interesting and nice. Thank you.

  • @frncscbtncrt
    @frncscbtncrt 3 года назад +1

    A bit fan of your father, Yoko. Thanks for making this

  • @DIVERGEsound
    @DIVERGEsound 4 года назад

    This was really well made. Yoko, this is great.

  • @Endymion766
    @Endymion766 4 года назад

    Fantastic!

  • @blackbird5634
    @blackbird5634 Год назад

    Shows the impact that solipsism can have on a family. Both father and son seem to exhibit symptoms of this syndrome.

    • @R_Priest
      @R_Priest 4 месяца назад

      I don't think they are living in their own minds, but living with no purpose and no goals. We all have to have meaning and goals informed by meaning. The common man finds meaning in selfish things, temporary things and worldly things. The buddhist ought to find it in great love, great compassion, and great vow informed by buddhist insight.

  • @elizabethbakewell6046
    @elizabethbakewell6046 2 года назад

    Yay!!!

  • @maunashakti4905
    @maunashakti4905 3 года назад

    I think your beautiful son Came knowing about the environment. It’s harsh for some of us. Please just let him be as he is. Maybe he will open his own restaurant where he can be a chef

  • @lorenzorenna
    @lorenzorenna 6 лет назад

    good job!!

  • @sergiomura1613
    @sergiomura1613 4 года назад +1

    He has become a Tenzo 😊

  • @yosotattoo
    @yosotattoo Год назад

    🙏

  • @slimrva6986
    @slimrva6986 Год назад

    💎💎💎🙏

  • @Merle1987
    @Merle1987 7 лет назад +8

    Maybe people need some pressure now and then.

    • @newcruiser
      @newcruiser 4 года назад

      "No one can sit to meditate in "peace" if you are hungry". Ask 3rd world countries. That is enough reason to live in the world. Believe me.

  • @Seekthetruth3000
    @Seekthetruth3000 4 года назад +1

    Meditate in a position which is comfortable for you. You do not have to cross your legs.

    • @honeyfungus4774
      @honeyfungus4774 3 года назад +2

      Exactly. What about old people and handicapped people, can they not meditate?

    • @anoridinaryhumanbeing70
      @anoridinaryhumanbeing70 3 года назад +1

      @@honeyfungus4774 ahhh!!
      They can..u can sit on a chair..
      Just if you r doing zazen.try to keep the spine straight.. that's necessary in zazen.

  • @howardleekilby7390
    @howardleekilby7390 11 месяцев назад

    ❤G❤A❤S❤S❤H❤O

  • @georgepantzikis7988
    @georgepantzikis7988 4 года назад +3

    I honestly don't understand why everyone in the comments is celebrating this as if it's the pinnacle of the Buddhist teachings. Buddhism goes beyond sitting down and doing nothing. You can never practice zazen and still have the clarity of the Buddha, and you can sit all day and contemplate life and still get nowhere. Buddhism is not an action, but a way of being. If all you do is sit and play video games (as the film portrayed the son as doing) you are in fact caught in the trap of desire that the Buddha warned against. If all you ever do are things you are comfortable with and that give you pleasure then you will be forever stuck in the cycle of Maya.
    The father said himself that the important thing is to practice zazen without expectations yet he fails to apply this same principle to his son correctly. When the son says that he doesn't want to go to visit the campus because he isn't ready, that's him creating an expectation of what he should be and of what the campus will be like. But if he doesn't go he will never truly know what it is that he must become and what it is that the campus is. In other words, he will never be "ready" to go. That's the entire point of Buddhism. There is no preparation, there is no road to travel. Life is something that is happening and if which you are a part. You are not just living, you are life. Just like a wave and the ocean are inseparable. And the entire point of life is that it never stops in something, never reaches a set or fixed identity. Life is running ahead and you have to run with it. Only once you accept this fundamental impermanence and let go of expectations or ideas about being "ready" or "worthy" or "good enough" can you fund true peace.

    • @jaycowijaya4058
      @jaycowijaya4058 2 года назад

      I think such comment can only come from people who has no children. But if you have, you see them grow, you see how desire entangled them, you will do the same he did. Because you got no choice, your whole being is already in zen, if you speak about it to your family, it would ruin the message. You will prefer to let him go deep into desire and suffering, then one day when sky is clear, maybe they will think of their dad, how would he be in his condition, then the transformation starts

  • @prateeksharma5557
    @prateeksharma5557 4 года назад

    Wow

  • @wingchunmanchester2261
    @wingchunmanchester2261 4 года назад

    🙏🙏👍🏼

  • @rr7firefly
    @rr7firefly 5 лет назад

    The Western World (America as its grossest manifestation): a dog chasing its tail. At some point the dog dies.

    • @WolfKenneth
      @WolfKenneth 4 года назад

      Everything dies someday.

    • @rr7firefly
      @rr7firefly 4 года назад

      @@WolfKenneth You are absolutely correct. But that is not what Americans believe. Most Westerners assume that the status quo will endure forever. What American would (or could) accept the fact that in the future the way of life that they know will not exist? That is not real to them. I, however, know all too well the temporality of all things. Of all people. My best friends from high school and college: all dead. And the prospect of mortality is possibly more real today than ever. For those seeking enlightenment that wake up call could be a good thing.

  • @kbkesq
    @kbkesq 5 лет назад +3

    Wow all that silence and he didn’t even learn to raise a child.

    • @HowdIEvenGetHere
      @HowdIEvenGetHere 5 лет назад +7

      Rude

    • @anoridinaryhumanbeing70
      @anoridinaryhumanbeing70 3 года назад

      Nature would know better ...❤️🙏

    • @costealucia5357
      @costealucia5357 3 года назад

      That'w why all these ''well raised'' children come from western world, right? Please, don't be hypocrite, no matter what your religion is.Also, that was a kid, he has all the chances of change in life, i bet you're not a child, you can't change much for now...

  • @hyperborean.
    @hyperborean. 5 лет назад +1

    He has no desire because he is lazy as himself said. What a ridiculous was of justifying inaction and uselessness. Call it Buddhism or whatever else.

  • @devdesai411
    @devdesai411 5 лет назад +1

    Lazy Japanese kid ? Does that ever exist? Aren't most japanese very hardworking and focused ?

  • @andypike1234
    @andypike1234 3 года назад

    Beautiful