Finding Purpose in Life Can Boost Your Health

The Japanese concept of ‘ikigai’ helps explain a boost in longevity

Marta Zaraska
Elemental

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Image: bakhtiar_zein/Getty Images

A group of elderly Japanese women sits around a long table, its surface covered with sheets of paper and stacks of pressed flowers. The atmosphere is cheerful, full of friendly banter. An energetic 84-year-old, Michiko, shuffles through the supplies, picking up petals, then carefully arranges them into an artful composition. She likes coming here, to this senior center in one of Tokyo’s many suburbs, and does so on a regular basis — with flower arrangement class being one of the top attractions. She says that the hobby and resulting friendships provide her with ikigai, a reason for living. As such, it may be at least in part responsible for Michiko’s enviable health and vitality.

Ikigai is a word you hear a lot in Japan. People will readily tell you that “my children are my ikigai,” “my work is my ikigai,” or “volunteering for my neighborhood is my ikigai.” The word does not translate easily into English, but roughly it means “the reason to be living.” The top dictionary in Japan defines ikigai as “joy and a sense of well-being from being alive” and “realizing the value of being alive.” No matter the exact definition, however, many Japanese people believe that a culture of cultivating ikigai is one of the reasons for the…

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Marta Zaraska
Elemental

Marta Zaraska is the author of “Growing Young: How Friendship, Optimism and Kindness Can Help You Live to 100”, endorsed by Adam Grant, Dan Buettner, and others