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The Pentagon said building these new weapons is their “First Priority.”... At times, our a

The Pentagon said building these new weapons is their “First Priority.”... [WSW Logo]( At times, our affiliate partners reach out to the Editors at Wall Street Wizardry with special opportunities for our readers. The message below is one we think you should take a close, serious look at. [devider] As Daisetz T Suzuki writes in Zen in the Japanese Culture: "A haiku does not express ideas but… puts forward images reflecting intuitions. These images are not figurative representations made use of by the poetic mind, but they directly point to original intuitions, indeed they are intuitions themselves." The suggestion is that the composition of haiku is so intuitive, it is almost unconscious. Haiku and their close attention to the details of nature are part of the wider Japanese concepts of nagomi and ikigai, which roughly translated equate to a sense of meaning and harmony. "[Haiku] gives us an insight into why the word ikigai exists in Japanese," writes Yukari Mitsuhashi in Ikigai: Giving Every Day Meaning and Joy. "In our everyday lives, whether we are immersing ourselves in nature or devouring traditional Japanese food, paying attention to detail grabs our focus on to what is right in front of us, instead of wondering about our to-do lists in our head… permitting us to find joy and ikigai in simple, everyday things." And the principles of haiku can be calming when applied to other areas of life, too. In his book Goodbye Things, Funio Sasaki writes: "Traditional paintings have few figures in them and value negative space. Japanese calligraphy and brush paintings are in black and white. Haiku is the shortest poem form in the world. These are a few examples of a minimalistic aesthetic in Japanese art and culture." In the book, Sasaki, like Bashō all those centuries before, decides to give away most of his possessions, and explores the feeling of calm and tranquillity that results: "There are more things to gain from eliminating excess than you might imagine: time, space, freedom, and energy, for example." Find your flow Artists and writers have long been drawn to solitude – but why is that, and what can we learn from them? Beverley D'Silva speaks to Tracey Emin and others to find out more. F From Wordsworth wandering lonely as a cloud to a thousand pop songs about love-lost angst, culture is steeped in references to loneliness. Some authors have sung its praises – Virginia Woolf said loneliness allowed her to feel "the singing of the real world". Emily Brontë's novel, Wuthering Heights, pulsates with agonising loneliness, from its windswept Yorkshire Moors setting to its moody, solitary antihero Heathcliff. The writer is said to have avoided human society, and rarely left Haworth. While comedian Lily Tomlin once quipped: "Just remember. We're all in this alone". More like this: - Why change is the key to a good life - Three ideas for how to live a fuller life - Have we got minimalism all wrong? Artists have traditionally spent time apart from others, all the better to connect with their muse. Shakespeare wrote one of his masterpieces, King Lear, in quarantine in the early 1600s, as the Black Plague ravaged London. Frida Kahlo said she painted self-portraits, for which she is most noted, because she was "so often alone". Van Gogh left Paris in the hope that the quieter ambience of Arles in the south of France would give him mental clarity. The lonely, tortured artist archetype can be traced back to Renaissance architect and artist Giorgio Vasari; his influential book of 1550, The Lives of the Artists, depicts the artist as someone who lives on the periphery of society, literally and metaphorically. An exhibition at the RA combines the works of Tracey Emin (pictured) and Edvard Munch (Credit: Courtesy of Galleria Lorcan O’Neill Roma /Tracey Emin / David Parry) An exhibition at the RA combines the works of Tracey Emin (pictured) and Edvard Munch (Credit: Courtesy of Galleria Lorcan O’Neill Roma /Tracey Emin / David Parry) Of course, not everyone wants to be isolated, and lockdowns and social distancing rules have inevitably led to greater feelings of loneliness, particularly among young adults. But if loneliness is distressing, then solitude is a more agreeable animal, and individuals have chosen to be alone since ancient times. The first known Christian hermit was Paul of Thebes believed to have lived alone in the desert of Egypt for many decades. Anthony Storr, in his book Solitude: A Return to Self, proposed that spending time happily alone is necessary for mental health and creativity, and that the most profound human experiences have little to do with our relationships with others. And Picasso, no less, is much quoted on the subject, with the phrase: "Without great solitude no serious work can be accomplished". The loneliness of the soul Loneliness and grief carve a deep, dark seam through the current show by the British artist Tracey Emin. Her joint exhibition with works by Edvard Munch, at London's Royal Academy, bears the title The Loneliness of the Soul, reflecting qualities she has identified with in the Norwegian Expressionist's work since she "fell in love with him" at the age of 18, she tells BBC Culture. Munch was very emotional but very existential too, always in a position of being on the outside looking in – Tracey Emin Emin may still be best known worldwide for her "confessional" and controversial art installations of the 1990s including My Bed, with its cigarette butts, vodka bottles and stained mattress; and Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963-1995, appliquéd with 102 names. Not to mention her reputation for hedonism, and stark emotional honesty about her public and private life. As she says: "I tell it like it is". But her art and life – always twin flames – have changed. She's embracing her exceptional talent for painting while recovering from serious illness. Crouching Nude, 1917-1919, by Edvard Munch – the Norwegian Expressionist valued solitude (Credit: Munchmuseet) Crouching Nude, 1917-1919, by Edvard Munch – the Norwegian Expressionist valued solitude (Credit: Munchmuseet) In July last year Emin was diagnosed with squamous-cell bladder cancer, the same disease her mother, Pam, died of in 2016. Emin underwent radical surgery to remove her bladder, uterus, fallopian tubes, ovaries, lymph nodes, urethra and part of her colon and vagina. In April this year she announced on BBC Two's Newsnight that her cancer is "gone". She also described how she faced the rest of her life with a "major disability" (a urostomy bag replaces her bladder). "I never realised how much I wanted to live until I thought I was going to die," she said. In May her "cancer self-portraits" were published in The Guardian, brave selfies taken while she was in hospital and post-surgery. Prior to her cancer diagnosis, Emin, 57, had been working hard on the Royal Academy show. From thousands of works in the Munch archive in Oslo, Norway, she selected 18 oils and watercolours by the artist. These now sit with more than 25 of her own works, including paintings, sculptures and neons – many made in the same time period, but 100 years apart. It's a landmark show, the first time the two artists have been displayed together. Its themes of grief and loneliness are palpable, the works full of drama and quite heart-rending, especially in the context of Emin's illness. In the works I am The Last of my Kind (2019) and You Came (2018) there is a visceral vulnerability and anguish in the solitary nude figures; trauma is etched into the powerful This is life without you – You made me Feel Like This (2018); while the earlier neon piece More Solitude (2014) points to the necessity of aloneness. Emin's I am the Last of my Kind, 2019 (left) and You Came, 2018 (Credit: Private collection courtesy of Galleria Lorcan O’Neill Roma /Tracey Emin / Photo: David Parry) Emin's I am the Last of my Kind, 2019 (left) and You Came, 2018 (Credit: Private collection courtesy of Galleria Lorcan O’Neill Roma /Tracey Emin / Photo: David Parry) Her 40-year fascination with Munch parallels their lives and psyches. He painted his emotional state with painful rawness, a shockingly new technique that gave birth to Expressionism. His "soul paintings" – tortured souls and ghostly lovers – reflected his fascination with then-popular spiritualism and the supernatural. That interest offers further common ground – Emin has said her relatives held seances at home in Margate. Munch had a drinking problem and was forced to give up alcohol to save his sanity – Emin has also given up drinking, to save her health. She sees him as a kindred soul, telling me over the phone from her London home: "I related to how he viewed the world so alone. He was very emotional but very existential too, always in a position of being on the outside looking in." Munch wasn’t very happy, as one would suspect from his work: "He had a lot of relationships but not much sex," she says. Emin has always been candid about her love life: she tells me she's not been in a relationship for 11 years, and has lived alone for 20 years, then corrects herself: "I lived with my cat, Docket, but he died last year." Docket was her "little soulmate". Now he's gone, she feels there's room, more space to invite love into her life. There is a sense of aloneness about Munch's work including Seated Female Nude, 1923-33 (Credit: Munchmuseet) There is a sense of aloneness about Munch's work including Seated Female Nude, 1923-33 (Credit: Munchmuseet) Emin has been reading Munch's portrayals of death (he lost his mother when he was five, his sister at 14) in the context of the current pandemic. "He was brought up with a lot of death around him. Think about it, before [the current pandemic] some people had not experienced death unless it was their parents, say. Now few can say that after the past year… People have become much more aware of the finality and the fragility of life too." That might include herself – and have helped to shape her own experience of solitude over the last year. When she was diagnosed with cancer, she consciously distanced herself from friends to preserve her energy to get through the surgery and to heal she says. During her recovery she's been working less and has allowed friends back in – she has been glad of their support. "I'm the happiest I've been, really." Facing death has "made other problems pale into insignificance. If something made me unhappy before, it would engulf me. Now I just deal with it… The cancer's really helped me with that." The artist is relishing a new lust for life. Her 9m-high bronze sculpture, The Mother – "I'm giving Munch the mother he never had" – will be installed outside the Munch Museum in Oslo; her studio complex in Margate should soon be completed; and a major show in Venice, which was postponed owing to her illness, will now go ahead in 2024. Also, she says: "I'm open to love, which is very different to how I felt… I also feel I deserve it, maybe before I didn't." Calmness is regarded by some with suspicion – is a state of calmness really just a state of passivity? A surrender of engagement, giving up, or, worse, a sociopathic disconnection? But being calm need not equate with being passive or numb. When we're absorbed in something we love – music, gardening, drawing, knitting, writing, whatever it is – we can enter an almost trance-like state of calm, mesmerised by what we are doing. As Mitsuhashi argues in her book about ikigai, immersing ourselves in nature or a particular activity makes us focus on what is in front of us, freeing up our minds from other things, and enabling us to find peace. In her classic work The Artist's Way, Julia Cameron encourages the reader to "make a commitment to quiet time". She writes: "Creativity occurs in the moment, and in the moment we are timeless". And author Mihaly Csiksezentmihalyi argues that what really makes us feel not only calm and peaceful, but also glad to be alive, is unlocking a more fulfilling state of being. He calls this state of mind "flow". In his book Flow: The Psychology of Happiness, he throws light on the idea that many philosophers before him have posited – that the way to peace doesn't lie in mindless detachment, but in mindful challenge. Each of us finds our flow in different ways, and our sense of calm. [China recently launched a hypersonic nuclear missile around the world…]( Her psyche has changed; she feels that her ordeal has erased trauma. "It's gone," she says. Emin appreciates her "amazing life….I'm embracing everything. Nearly dying has a lot to do with it, I know." She's working on having a "quieter, more peaceful life", and plans to fill her days with "painting to the sound of birdsong". She's sure of one thing: "I no longer feel alone… I think the chance of me dying without someone holding my hand is zero." Tonic of wilderness According to many artists and writers, there is a "cure" for loneliness. Maya Angelou said music was hers: "I could crawl into the space between the notes and curl my back to loneliness". Others find it in nature, hiking, wild swimming: the "tonic of wilderness" as Thoreau put it. There's so much stimulation in the wild, maybe there's no space for loneliness – Martin Shaw Author Martin Shaw knows about the virtues of isolation outdoors. As a "rites-of-passage wilderness guide", he takes groups into deepest Dartmoor, in the English countryside, and other remote places, where they separate and learn to "reconnect with nature and their own character". Retreats like these date back to Ancient Celtic times, says Shaw, the author of Smoke Hole: Looking to the Wild in the Time of the Spyglass, which reframes myths for our times. He has also collaborated with the actor Mark Rylance and the artist Ai WeiWei. Shaw tells BBC Culture that people on his retreats, from troubled teens to traumatised war veterans, can report being bored or homesick but "I've never had anyone come back and say they were lonely… There's so much stimulation in the wild, maybe there's no space for loneliness." Shaw is at home outdoors – he lived in a tent for four years – but despite his deep inner resources, found the confines of his Dartmoor home in the third lockdown a bit much. "I genuinely was lonely and missed conversation and simple interactions." The work of painter Edward Hopper is explored in Olivia Laing's book The Lonely City (Credit: Alamy) The work of painter Edward Hopper is explored in Olivia Laing's book The Lonely City (Credit: Alamy) The key is in forging meaningful relationships, according to Dr Andrea Wigfield of the Centre for Loneliness Studies at University of Sheffield. The centre's research showed that when people can't be together, arts-based activities, such as children and grandparents working together online on arts projects, can help them to connect. However these aren't enough on their own to combat loneliness if meaningful relationships are absent. In the UK, Loneliness Awareness Week (LAW) 2021 runs from 14 to 18 June. Run by the Marmalade Trust, the theme this year is acceptance, and their "We get lonely" campaign aims to make loneliness accepted as a natural part of being human. The writer Olivia Laing is familiar with finding positives in adversity. Moving to New York City in her 30s after a break-up, she felt a terrible loneliness every day. The book that evolved from that, The Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being Alone, was a hit. The New York Times said it was "daring…about the universal struggle to be known". In it, Laing examines loneliness through art, with essays on Andy Warhol's Time Capsules and Edward Hopper's Nighthawks among others. Laing tells me that focusing on Hopper's paintings with their "feeling of separation, of being walled off or penned in, combined with near-unbearable exposure" helped her, and "eased the burden of my own feelings. Someone else had grappled with loneliness, and found beauty, even value in it". [Arrow]( This is beyond crazy. And a big threat to America. [How did Biden respond to it?]( [WSW footer logo]( You are receiving this e-mail because you have expressed an interest in the Financial Education niche on one of our landing pages or sign-up forms on our website. If you {EMAIL} received this e-mail in error and would like to report spam, simply send an email to abuse@wallstreetwizardry.com. You’ll receive a response within 24 hours. Email sent by Finance and Investing Traffic, LLC, owner and operator of Wall Street Wizardry. This ad is sent on behalf of Behind The Markets, 4260 NW 1st Avenue, Suite # 55 Boca Raton, FL 33431 – 4264. If you would like to unsubscribe from receiving offers from Behind The Markets please [click here](. 221 W 9th St # Wilmington, DE 19801. © 2023 Wall Street Wizardry. All Rights Reserved[.]( [Privacy Policy]( [Terms & Conditions]( | [Unsubscribe]( [devider]

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