While observing cherry blossoms in the movie “The Last Samurai,” samurai leader Moritsugu Katsumoto (played by Ken Watanabe) says to 7th Cavalry Captain Nathan Algren (played by Tom Cruise), “The perfect blossom is a rare thing. You could spend your life looking for one, and it would not be a wasted life.”
The point behind those words concerns the pursuit of perfection, or purpose in life. And even though neither may be fully attained, the destination is not necessarily the goal. It’s the journey that matters.
While deciding on what meals to cook for the week, meals that would be interesting, nutritious and not too repetitive (You can’t have pizza EVERY Friday night, and there’s no reason you can’t have Tacos on Thursday every now and then), I try to remember: “The perfect weekly menu is a rare thing. You could spend your life trying to create one, and it would not be a wasted life.”
It’s a given that meatloaf and mashed potatoes are great for Sunday, and hamburgers and potato wedges seem obvious for Saturdays, but where does a Thai meal fit in, or a shrimp casserole? The perfect weekly menu may never be fully obtained, but it beats having to say, “I don’t know,” when asked, “What’s for dinner?” The destination is not necessarily the goal. It’s the journey to the grocery store that matters.
While contemplating on what would be the right time to head off to Walmart in search of food to complement my mostly well-thought-out weekly menu, I often say to myself, “The perfect shopping time is a rare thing. You could spend your life waiting for the perfect day (and time of day) to go — procrastinating over a cup of coffee and slice of buttered toast, wondering why the blue jays outside are causing such a ruckus — and it would not be a wasted life.”
Time is easy: early in the morning when it’s just you, the stockers and somebody buffing the floor. Saturdays are ok: everybody else is sleeping in, or off at their kid’s soccer game. I never go at noon or after work. At either of those times, the pursuit of perfection and purpose in life are thrown completely out the window. Besides, the destination is not really the goal. It’s the buy-two-and-get-one-free sale that really matters.
While standing at the avocado bin and trying to determine which avocados are good for today, which ones will be ready for tomorrow, and which ones to avoid at all cost, I often say to myself, “The straight-out-of-the-bin perfect avocado is a rare thing to find. You could spend your life looking for one (your spouse may file a missing person’s report if you do), and it would not be a wasted life.” At least in my opinion.
I’ve never been to a grocery store where I didn’t stop at the avocado bin and squeeze a few. Finding one that’s ripe enough to eat right then and there is like stumbling on buried treasure without the aide of a pirate or a map.
At the end of the movie, as the samurai leader is slowly dying and watching the cherry blossom petals blowing in the wind, he says, “Perfect…they are all…perfect.” And maybe that’s the point. Spending your life looking for the perfect avocado, weekly menu, or shopping time is not a wasted life. Not very movie worthy, but not wasted at all.










