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January Ikigai: A New Poetic Genre of Presence: Philosophy Poetry, #4
Indigo
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January Ikigai: A New Poetic Genre of Presence: Philosophy Poetry, #4
By None
Current price: $10.99


By None
January Ikigai: A New Poetic Genre of Presence: Philosophy Poetry, #4
Current price: $10.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
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January Ikigai: A New Poetic Genre of Presence is a contemplative work that resists definition while inviting attention. Situated between poetry, philosophy, and lived experience, the book unfolds through spare language, interior scenes, and reflective pauses. Rather than explaining Ikigai as purpose or productivity, it allows Ikigai to arise organically—from winter light, from conversation, from criticism, and from silence.
January is not merely a month here; it is a state of being. It signifies beginnings stripped of excess, a cold clarity that follows endings, and a readiness to listen. The poems move through domestic spaces, moments of self-doubt, quiet humor, and philosophical tension. Critics and comments are not antagonists but midwives—forces that awaken rather than wound.
Written in a minimalist and transmodern sensibility, January Ikigai bridges East and West, intimacy and thought, vulnerability and resolve. It proposes poetry as presence: not something to be consumed, but something to be inhabited. Each text stands as an invitation to slow down, to observe without mastery, and to recognize meaning as something conceived in relation—never alone.
This book is for readers who value stillness over spectacle, depth over declaration, and who understand that wisdom often arrives softly, through dialogue, contradiction, and lived time.
January Ikigai: A New Poetic Genre of Presence is a contemplative work that resists definition while inviting attention. Situated between poetry, philosophy, and lived experience, the book unfolds through spare language, interior scenes, and reflective pauses. Rather than explaining Ikigai as purpose or productivity, it allows Ikigai to arise organically—from winter light, from conversation, from criticism, and from silence.
January is not merely a month here; it is a state of being. It signifies beginnings stripped of excess, a cold clarity that follows endings, and a readiness to listen. The poems move through domestic spaces, moments of self-doubt, quiet humor, and philosophical tension. Critics and comments are not antagonists but midwives—forces that awaken rather than wound.
Written in a minimalist and transmodern sensibility, January Ikigai bridges East and West, intimacy and thought, vulnerability and resolve. It proposes poetry as presence: not something to be consumed, but something to be inhabited. Each text stands as an invitation to slow down, to observe without mastery, and to recognize meaning as something conceived in relation—never alone.
This book is for readers who value stillness over spectacle, depth over declaration, and who understand that wisdom often arrives softly, through dialogue, contradiction, and lived time.


















