Showing posts with label Tomohiro Hoshino. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tomohiro Hoshino. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Munching on Flowers

A couple of occasions have seen in Scriblets thoughts on a contemporary Japanese poet-painter I have long admired, Tomihiro Hoshino. Born in 1946, he was only two months out of university when a catastrophic accident left him paralyzed from the neck down. Despite overwhelming odds the young man fought and struggled to raise himself from the depths of physical and mental despair, to find the joy in life that overcomes even the darkest conditions.



Hoshino was a newly hired twenty-four year-old gymnastics teacher when he severely injured his neck while demonstrating a double somersault to his junior high school students. In one afternoon he went from an active life of gymnastics and mountain climbing, to lying motionless in an orthopedic hospital, where he remained for the next nine years completely paralyzed from the neck down. Complications brought him close to death several times and there were also days when he wanted to die, but gradually his physical condition stabilized and with that his desire to live returned.

Two years after his accident a fellow patient was being transferred to a different hospital and asked those in the ward to sign his canvas beach hat as a memento. Paralyzed, Tomihiro was at a loss how to sign the hat, until he managed with the help of his mother to hold a pen in his mouth and painstakingly write “Tomo.” Those four written letters were the beginning of a new life.


Now long married and living with his wife in Japan’s Gunma Prefecture, Hoshino is still paralyzed yet continues to produce paintings by holding a brush in his mouth. He has produced hundreds of works, many of them published in illustrated books of poems and essays. Among a dozen or more of his books are: Love From the Depths (1981), Journey of the Wind (1984), Here so Close But I Didn’t Know (1988) and Road of the Tinkling Bell (1990).


Hoshino’s writing has a simplicity that is familiar in much of Japanese poetry, old and new. With only a few lines he brings the reader into an almost tactile closeness with his subject, at the same time illuminating some small wonder or quality connecting him (and the reader as well) to that subject. Here are two poems from his first book, Love From the Depths.


WRITING ABOUT CHERRY BLOSSOMS IN 1977…


My friend pushed my wheelchair outside

under a cherry tree

And bent down a branch in full bloom

burying my face in blossoms


Filled with irresistible joy

I began

Munching on the flowers

blooming closest to my mouth.


ABOUT A BLOOM OF PEACH BLOSSOMS IN 1979 HE WROTE…


I lay face up

Griping about

One person after another

Then, from the corner of my right eye

I saw some peach blossoms

Laughing


Thursday, May 27, 2010

Thorn Flower

Reading today from something I want to share. The book is one I bought in Japan nine or ten years ago, one recommended by my sister, who also spent a few years in old Nihon. It’s called, Road of the Tinkling Bell: Paintings, Poems and Essays, created and written by Tomihiro Hoshino.


Tomihiro Hoshino is a Japanese man from Gunma Prefecture (near Tokyo) who suffered a near fatal gymnastics accident as a young man, and since that time has been unable to move his arms and legs. He learned during nine years in the hospital how to write and paint holding a brush in his mouth. Mr Hoshino’s simple and uncomplicated work is pure and beautiful, a view of life and its small, common rewards through the pen and the eyes of an extraordinary poet-artist.


Here are his words about a thorn flower.


Both flowers and thorns

emerge from the same point

By and by the flowers drop off

but the thorns remain

It’s like me

In my heart

I too feel a thorn


The book is page after page of wonderful paintings, exquisite stories.


In a later book by Mr Hoshino he tells the incredible story of his life, and in that book, too, includes many of his poems. A poem from his book, Love From the Depths


(orchid)

My immature pen

Could never capture one-thousandth

Of the beauty of this flower

But I want to keep it in my heart

Along with the affection of “N” who

Labored to raise it

Cut it

And brought it to me

I want it to bloom forever within me


Both books mentioned are available, but might be a bit pricey, especially the second one. If you get the chance, do read or look at anything from Tomihiro Hoshino, an extraordinary man.

About Me

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Oak Hill, Florida, United States
A longtime expat relearning the footwork of life in America