Tuesday, June 26, 2012

First full day

By 11:00 AM yesterday, I had definitely had enough new experiences that I was in theory ready to head home and call it a day. There were still eight solid hours of time to be spent at the Tea school though, so I couldn't begin to reconstruct my day in a meaningful or comprehensive way this morning.

I first arrived at the school on Tuesday. On Thursday, some of the students of the program I am visiting are hosting a chaji.

According to http://wiki.chado.no/Chaji, a chaji is "a tea gathering during which the host serves food and sake in addition to Koicha and Usucha. A chaji takes several hours to complete." Koicha is a thick, syrupy green tea, and usucha is the less formal, more famous whisked green of Tea ceremony.


The day that I arrived, there was a change in the normal schedule. Instead of regularly planned lectures in the morning, we took a "field trip" to Toinseki, a tea house that I believe is attached to the grounds of a Buddhist temple. This is where the chaji will take place on Thursday. 


Just typing "Toinseki" into Google provided me with the blogs of a number of Westerners who have attended this Tea school, so here are some pictures of the teahouse that somebody took.


***


After a walk-through and an explanation of what everyone will do tomorrow (I'm on kitchen duty), we returned to the school for lunch and afternoon Tea practice. I was placed with the kohai group - the students who began studying here in April rather than last September. They were performing a particular style of thick Tea, wherein the tea is kept in a thin tea container that is tied up in a special silk pouch. Then at the end of the lesson, we all played a Tea game called ha-getsu (flower-moon) in which we went through a Tea session with frequent stops to draw lots and determine who was going to take charge of the next part of the program.


After this was dinner, followed by evening cleaning. Everyone else then left to prepare for aspects of Thursday's chaji, and I headed out to purchase some necessities and groceries. 


I hope that the jetlag keeps up for a while, because early-to-bed, early-to-rise seems like the only way to make this program work. Whew! And I'm just a short-term visitor with comparatively light expectations.


Today, it's lectures in the morning and an afternoon of cleaning up the tea house and the surrounding gardens. Tomorrow, it's the chaji. Friday, I get to find out what a "normal day" looks like.

Monday, June 25, 2012

First night

Last night was the first of 13 that I expect to spend in Kyoto.

The flights and to/froms all went very smoothly. This is great, as I believe there were enough moving parts to the whole trip that any snafus would have caused some major problems along the way. The first leg of the journey was nothing but long, Dulles Airport -- Narita, but after that is was Customs -- Connecting domestic flight -- Baggage -- Shuttle bus to Kyoto -- Taxi to Guesthouse. I arrived at the guesthouse about 15 minutes before check-in ended, so all was well.

(A note to the wise, or at least to those who want to be prepared. If your Japanese location offers you a map on their website, print out the map and bring it along. It wasn't a problem for the taxi driver to call the guesthouse to ask for directions, but they offer those maps for a reason.)

I am staying at a guesthouse called Itoya, which, much to my enthusiasm, looks just like the pictures on the website. The real strength of the place is that it is about a 15-minute walk from the Tea Center where I will be studying this week and next. I am staying in a room called "the girls' dormitory," which is two bunks of beds in a very small space. This sounded like a reasonable setup to me because the English language version of the site is "Under Construction." As a matter of stereotypical expectation, I figured that sharing a room with a number of Japanese strangers would be much less invasive and loud than sharing a room with a bunch of Americans or other foreigners on holiday.

Also, the shared room arrangement brings cost down to just over $25 a night for a very nice little place to stay. With free WiFi.

Thanks to the free  WiFi, I arrived last night and found this message waiting for me from my contact at the Tea school:


Subject: short notice


Mina,

We will be going to visit the Toinseki teahouse tomorrow, so could you come to the Urasenke Center at 8:45? We will be going in western clothes. Yes, you are right, yukata is not appropriate in this situation.

If you are not in Japan yet, have a good trip. If you are already here, welcome.

See you tomorrow.




Hooray for the internet. (I was otherwise planning on arriving early for the day, but at about 9:00AM.)

Curious to learn a little about this Toinseki teahouse, I found this from a quick Google search. It seems to be the blog of someone who is attending the year-long version of the program that I'm visiting for a fortnight.

And now, with a business-card map and address for the guesthouse in my pocket, I am off!

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Stepping out to see inside


One phrase that comes up early in the book The Search for God at Harvard by Ari Goldman is a religion professor’s credo, “If you know only one religion, you know none at all.” I don’t recall whether my understanding of this phrase is based on the book’s explanation or my own thinking about it, but here is my take.

There is a framework to what religion is, what areas of life it touches and what its goals are. There is also a framework that describes each individual religion. These frameworks all overlap, but to think I understand religion in general because I understand my own religion, that’s just wrong-headed.

The best example I can think of for this is a Jewish friend who enjoyed discussing religion with a Christian coworker. One day she asked him a question that had been bothering her for some time. “How do Jews get saved?” The dominant purpose of her Christianity was to achieve salvation, and so salvation was to her a central religious value. Judaism is a religion, so how do Jews get saved?

Okay, my understanding of the original religion-professor comment is shaky at best, but if you changed the word “religion” to “language,” I would be in complete agreement.

As a freshman in college, I was looking over majors and had the unusual experience of feeling deeply annoyed by the linguistics major. The reason for my annoyance was because the linguistics major required a certain level of Latin and of Greek, as well as two semesters of a Romance language of your choice. There were no other language requirements beyond that.

How shortsighted, I thought.

At that point I had been studying Japanese for a year, and a major attractor for me was the desire to study a language that was as dissimilar to English as possible. I had taken French throughout high school and thought, flippantly, that it was basically highfalutin English with a funny accent.

By learning Japanese, I felt that I had additional insight into what a language could be. The subject of a sentence can be implied! You can conjugate by person-number-gender, or you can conjugate by politeness levels! Does it even matter what order you use for the different parts of the sentence? Maybe not!

This little-vision linguistics major, I decided, had it all wrong. By the end of the major you might be able to say what Romance languages are, and you would know how Romance languages develop. But you wouldn’t understand the truth about language.  You have to travel way outside of what you know, before you can make sense of your world.


I checked my college website to see if the linguistics major still calls for the same courses. The major is gone, though one can still concentrate in “language and linguistics.” Looking at the concentration’scourse requirements, I am mollified. 

Friday, June 15, 2012

Latest news

For a while, I wasn't posting anything on this blog because I didn't have much to say. The Tea school in Northern Virginia closed down in August, and so for most of the past year I haven't been able to do much Tea.

Then the new Tea school, Washin-an, opened downtown in late March - a formal opening set to coincide with the 100-year anniversary of the cherry blossoms. Except... the school didn't exactly open at that time; they held some very formal ceremonies with important out of town visitors in attendance.

Last month Washin-an opened to general classes, and I have been trying to find a time that works for me to attend. All of my other Tea classes have been Friday mornings, which always works with my schedule. Washin-an does not currently offer Friday mornings, and of the times they do offer, some work with my Sep-May work schedule and some with my summer schedule (which are vastly different, the only commonality being Fridays off), but nothing works year-round.

Things may or may not be falling into a routine now, but that routine is about to stop because I am traveling to Japan for a month, starting next week. Very excitingly, half of my time in Japan will be spent studying with the Midorikai, which is a department at Urasenke headquarters in Kyoto that is specifically for foreigners to learn Tea. Students generally study for a year, but I get a 2-week visit.

I will certainly try very hard to keep updates going through my trip, since chances are there will be good things to write about.