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Ikeda Sensei

Adversity as a Source of Pride

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My mentor, second Soka Gakkai President Josei Toda, always encouraged young people to read books, especially famous works of literature. He sternly reprimanded those who didn’t. If he discovered us reading magazines of no positive value, he would erupt in anger.

I remember eagerly reading in my youth the writings of Eiji Yoshikawa, author of such historical novels as The Three Kingdoms and Miyamoto Musashi.

Yoshikawa once said to a young man of privilege:

You are an unfortunate youth. For there is no greater misfortune than seeing too much beauty and partaking of too much fine cuisine from an early age. It is sad to see a young person’s sensitivity—his ability to perceive joy as joy—become dulled.[2]

These words have remained with me all my life. Those who, in the all-important years for laying the foundation of their lives, are blessed with every possible comfort, are coddled and pampered, lack nothing or never experience any hardships are not by any means happy or fortunate. They are in fact the most unfortunate. There is no way they will grow into great individuals.

The absence of hardship is not happiness. True happiness and joy in life are found in not being defeated by hardship, by picking ourselves up again when we fall down, by weathering and triumphing over adversity.

Life is a battle.

Life is a challenge.

Life is training.

Difficulties are an inescapable part of life. Our practice of Nichiren Buddhism empowers us to build a strong self that can bravely face every trial we encounter, enabling us to challenge the situation with a positive spirit and see it as a chance for growth. Those who have this fighting spirit win in the end.

November 7, 2025 World Tribune, p. 2

References

  1. An excerpt from the 2003 speech in which Ikeda Sensei presented these guidelines appears in The Wisdom for Creating Happiness and Peace, part 2, revised edition, pp. 84–93. ↩︎
  2. Translated from Japanese. Yoshikawa Eiji to watashi [Eiji Yoshikawa and me (A compilation of tributes from various luminaries)] (Tokyo: Kodansha, 1992), p. 248. ↩︎

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