This past weekend was a special one here in Bermuda. It marked the 32nd annual “Round the Sound” swim. This event is a local open water swimming staple, with five distances ranging from 800 meters up to 10 kilometers. It also has participants from a wide range of ages from ~9 years old, to literally over 90-year-olds.
It was also special because this year five of my good friends and former college swimming teammates came out to participate (taking the gold in three of the five distances in the process). Getting to splash around with people I had not seen in years, and to catch up with them beyond the competition was a particular highlight of the weekend for me personally.
And as great as everything was, I am being honest when I say that during the actual swimming of the 10-kilometer race, it didn’t always feel great. In fact, many times over the course of the day I found myself looking forward to a time after the race and daydreaming about when the race would be over and I would not be grinding away like I was in that moment.
Also, each time this occurred and I noticed it happening, I thought back to the Japanese concept of “Ichi-go ichi-e” that I learned about last December. Most literally Ichi-go ichi-e translates as “one time, one meeting.” More broadly it describes the concept of treasuring the unrepeatable nature of a moment.
I know what some of you might be thinking, surely you want the painful nature of those 10k moments to be unrepeatable! However, I would disagree. As Henry David Thoreau rightly said: “As if you could kill time without injuring eternity.” Each moment, every single moment, is one that only exists and ever will exist in that moment. Spending that moment, or any moment, waiting for the moment to be over, waiting for “next,” is a waste of the most precious gift we are given in this life: the gift of right now. The literal present of the present.
Regardless of what my shoulders might have been feeling in any moment during that race, every single moment also had its own unique and unrepeatable beauty if only I opened my mind enough to see it. From sharing the water with my friends, to also seeing and noticing that I was sharing it with spotted eagle rays (which I saw several times), as well as parrot fish and other amazing Bermudian sea life, every stroke, indeed every moment was something I should appreciate, and found that I could appreciate when I had the right mindset.
The race could have been something I chose to suffer through, or time I was trying to kill until it was over. The two hours in the water could also individually and collectively be some truly magical moments. I had that choice. I chose the latter option.
Later that same day my six-year-old daughter was asking about people’s ages and commenting based on how old they were on how close or far away from death she perceived them to be. When I caught on to what she was doing I pointed out that none of us know how close or far we are from death. Any of us, regardless of age, can be taken from this earth at any moment.
I explained that this wasn’t a bad thing, but rather should be a motivator to appreciate the beauty and opportunity for beauty that every moment we get holds. Unlike in Nikki Erlick’s The Measure, none of us know how long we have to experience and appreciate, or not, these moments. We can choose to be a person who “kills time,” or we can choose not to be that kind of person.
I won’t pretend I am great at this, or that it comes naturally. There is a reason I had to repeatedly remind myself of Ichi-go ichi-e during the race. There is a reason I must remind myself of it when I step outside to appreciate a sunrise or sunset, only to feel the itch to pull my phone out of my pocket and check for any recent notifications.
There is much in this world that wants to pull us from this moment, not least of which are the default settings of our own brains. The magic of Ichi-go ichi-e helps to remind me that the default does not and should not be where I leave things. It helps me come back to this moment, every “this moment” I am lucky enough to experience.
And so, as I close, I do so wishing you your best moment right now. And in the next as well…