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Meditations on God

  • Robert Van Valkenburgh

  • Beyond A Pragmatic Existence

    Pragmatism, along with its attributes necessity, efficiency, frugality, and prudence, is a useful tool, especially with regards to necessity, but it is not an end in itself.

    The goal of pragmatism is not merely to be more pragmatic.

    It is a starting point.

    It helps us to survive and, if used wisely, to thrive.

    Pragmatism’s purpose is to give us space, to buy us time, and to increase the distance between ourselves and necessity.

    It helps us to reach a place where, beyond the struggle for food, clothing, shelter, and security, we can actually begin enjoying our lives, our relationships, and our experiences.

    Once our basic and immediate needs are met, once we have some financial, emotional, and relational security, our focus should shift away from pure necessity for necessity’s sake and toward that which brings us joy, contentment, and satisfaction.

    There is more to life than that which necessity, efficiency, frugality, and prudence will give us.

    Pragmatism lays the foundation, but a life built on pragmatism alone is existing more than it is truly living.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

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    September 1, 2020
    contentment, enjoyment, existing, joy, living, necessity, practicality, pragmatism, satisfaction

  • Our Difficulty

    Doing the easy thing now does not make the difficult thing go away.

    The best time to address difficulty is as it presents itself.

    Waiting will not make it go away.

    Time does not make that which is difficult easier to deal with.

    Ignoring a difficult problem, task, or truth in favor of comfort, convenience, or complacency merely delays the difficulty.

    Often, difficulty delayed becomes harder, not easier, to face and overcome.

    As time elapses, difficulty left unaddressed and unresolved grows, or at least our fear of it does.

    The harder we try to hide from the reality of that which we have to face, the more overwhelming our fear and trepidation become.

    Even if the difficult thing itself does not change, our perception of its gravity does and that makes it more difficult to face.

    Sometimes we try to overcompensate in other areas of our lives in an attempt to make up for that which we are avoiding.

    We want to believe that enough little wins, enough easy choices, and enough progress in other directions, all layered on top of each other, will cancel out the difficult thing we are avoiding, but rarely is this true.

    The sooner we accept, embrace, and take responsibility for the fact that this burden is ours alone to bear, this challenge is ours alone to face, and this obstacle is ours alone to overcome, the sooner our lives will actually become less difficult.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

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    August 31, 2020
    acceptance, burdens, challenges, choices, comittment, difficulty, obstacles, transcendence

  • The Paradox Of Joy

    Suffering is an unavoidable fact of life.

    We may try to ignore it, deny it, or run from it, but it will always find us in one way or another.

    Joy, on the other hand, is guaranteed to no one.

    It must be sought out.

    The challenge we face is that with seeking comes the inherent risk of failure and, with failure comes suffering.

    When we look for something, we may not find it.

    When we reach for something, we may not grasp it.

    When we cling to something, we may not keep it.

    When we aspire to something, we may not become it.

    When we attempt something, we may not succeed at it.

    When we ask for something, we may be denied it.

    None of this feels good.

    Worse still, is that, all too often, we also experience suffering when we get exactly what we thought we wanted.

    We suffer when we discover that it is not enough, that it did not alleviate our pain, satisfy our craving, or diminish our longing.

    This is the paradox of joy.

    We cannot experience joy if we do not seek it, but it cannot be found in that which is sought.

    Joy does not exist in the outcome, but in the process of seeking itself, in the way we approach it, in the way move through it, and in who we become and what we experience because of it.

    It is the process we must embrace, suffering and all.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

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    August 30, 2020
    achievement, failure, goals, joy, loss, purpose, seeking, success, suffering

  • For Joy

    It is okay to enjoy something purely for the sake of itself.

    There is a lot in this life that we must do.

    There is a lot that requires us to be practical, efficient, frugal, prudent, and disciplined.

    Not everything we do has to have some underlying reason, purpose, or motive, however.

    Some things we should do simply for the sake of the joy we experience from doing them.

    Joy, itself, is reason enough.

    Joy is purpose enough.

    Sometimes we need to excuse ourselves from pragmatism, even if just for a moment, so that we can allow ourselves to experience joy for joy’s sake.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

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    August 29, 2020
    discipline, efficiency, frugality, joy, life, meaning, necessity, practicality, pragmatism, priorities, prudence, purpose

  • Joy In Creativity

    Life is difficult enough as is, but imagine how much worse it would be without the arts.

    Whether we are talking about the fine arts, performing arts, culinary arts, or even martial arts, much of what makes life worthwhile is the product of creativity more than practicality.

    Of course, we need food, clothing, shelter, and the ability to defend ourselves, but these needs are fixed.

    They are a baseline.

    Satisfying these basic needs brings us relief, security, and safety.

    Simply put, these needs must be met for our survival.

    That which makes life actually worth living, however, is found beyond survival.

    Joy is found beyond survival.

    The practical necessities of life will inevitably impose themselves on us eventually.

    In the meantime, we should unapologetically pursue our creativity wherever it leads us.


    Holistic Budo: As it is in budo, so too it is in life. As it is in life, so too it is in budo.

    Robert Van Valkenburgh is co-founder of Taikyoku Mind & Body and Kogen Dojo where he teaches Taikyoku Budo and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.

    All photos by Robert Van Valkenburgh unless otherwise noted.

    Follow Robert Van Valkenburgh and Holistic Budo on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, and LinkedIn.

    If you found this post helpful or meaningful in some way, please feel free to Share, Comment, and Subscribe below.

    Share this:

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    August 28, 2020
    art, creative, creativity, joy, life, meaning, necessity, need, survival, the arts

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