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Beautiful People Beautiful Rituals Yoga

Why do I love yoga?

When I first came to this country I became very homesick for something you may not guess.  Of course while I missed the familiar warmth of grandparents, relatives and friends – and yes, let’s not forget the refined aesthetically pleasing food… all that yes… BUT what I missed the most may have been something I feel relatively new societies with little history (2-3 hundred years vs. 4-5 thousand years…) seem to lack entirely…

What is it?

Rituals… I love rituals…rituals are what makes this life … meaningful as we trip and fall over in our efforts to find our Dharma.

It’s not only food and water that nourishes us.  We nourish ourselves one slow yogic breath at a time – one replenishing ritual at a time in recognizing the miracle in the ordinary. Small rituals are the medicine prescribed by the divine.

Rituals allow us to find what’s authentic…as I pursue my home away from home through the practice of … rituals.  Incorporate it in your everyday.  Rituals are centering… grounding… and… healing.  As I see it, many of us are TOO independent and TOO alone and self-absorbed. (someone said, to be alone may be a choice we seek but “to be lonely” is … what? )

Yeah, sure, you can just do restorative yoga at home. You can do any yoga at home alone. You don’t need a teacher nor a guide – just find a “teacher” for the moment on the internet… buy a manual, a book that explains all… BUT did you know we are wired to be tribal?  While I have my home practice of yoga and there’s enough DVDs and YogaGlow recordings… I never have to step into a room full of humans again to practice yoga; and yet,  I crave the rituals shared in a community of yoga students… that’s when it gets powerful. One singular intention is just that, one; but multiple intentions of many – a group intention is so big and powerful.  That’s why when people say they have a home practice (me too – been a recluse by choice), I wonder – have you been to a yoga studio lately?  There’s a certain communal energy that envelopes us there to bring about what’s authentic is us all.

Tribal energy is greater than a single independent energy… Native Americans knew this.

Message to Mankind from a Hopi Elder (picked up during my trip to Grand Canyon) :

“You have been telling the people that this is the Eleventh Hour. Now you must go back and tell the people that this is The Hour. And there are things to be considered….

Where are you living?

What are you doing?

What are your relationships?

Are you in right relation?

Where is your water?

Know your garden.

It is time to speak your truth.

Create your community.

Be good to each other.

And do not look outside yourself for your leader.”

Then it is said that he smiled, and went on, “This could be a good time!

There is a river flowing now, very fast. It is so great and swift that there are those who will be afraid. They will try to hold on to the shore. They will feel they are being torn apart and suffer greatly.

Know that the river has its destination. The elders say we must push off into the middle of the river, keep our eyes open and our heads above the water.

See who is in there with you and celebrate.

At this time in history we are to take nothing personally least of all ourselves, for the moment we do that, our spiritual growth comes to a halt.

The time of the lone wolf is over.

Gather yourselves; banish the word ‘struggle’ from your attitude and vocabulary.

All that we do now must be done in a sacred way and in celebration.

We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.

-Hopi Elder, Hopi Nation, Oraibi, Arizona

While this may have been a call to “his” people, many took it as a call to all – to mankind. The messiah we seek is within us, among us… and it is comforting to know that truth.

 

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Beautiful People Beautiful Places Beautiful Rituals Healthy Food Healthy Living

Visited Rainbow Grocery after the Shojin cooking session in San Francisco.  Of course bought sesame seeds so that I can grind some sesame myself at home… have been using my Cuisinart to make Tahini sauce and pesto sauce but I am now ready to at times, embrace the inconvenience of slow foods as to quote from Kyoto Journal’s interview with the famed Chef Toshio Tanahashi to the question,

Shojin cuisine does not strictly equate to vegetarianism. How are they different?”

Chef Tanahashi answeres:  “Shojin abides by Buddhism’s Five Prohibitions, the first of which is “don’t kill.” However, one of the most important teachings of Buddha is also to accept all suffering and pleasure with equanimity. The same is applied at the dinner table. Buddhists should receive all food that is offered, and not distinguish between meat and vegetables. So, Buddhists are in fact permitted to eat meat in certain cases. Out of choice, however, Shojin cuisine only uses vegetables. Shojin cooking may seem limiting, but actually it is very liberating. Convenience will destroy humanity. Inconvenience leads to freedom.”

So in search of that “freedom”, I might sometimes forego Cuisinart as I hear him saying “mottainai” – what a waste – in his opinion, we lose a little life, that is, small pleasures inbedded in our ordinary daily life.  What he illuminates by this comment is that there is this perfect opportunity to “experience” a precious moment, a ritual… yet, mindlessly,  you are bypassing that opportunity by the short-cut in using a modern appliance. Need not go to any temples, shrines or monasteries to find the Zen in the ordinary… in the kitchen, on the floor…To him, it’s a chance to strengthen your core with your abdominal breathing, a chance to meditate and be at present with the experience as aroma of sesame wafts through the air you breathe.  Indeed, I experienced Pranayama, Meditation and Aromatherapy all at once!  Who would have thought grinding sesame in the special mortar* and pestle** to be so Zen.  The labor of love then makes for  the gastronomic bliss…of tasting the painstakingly prepared foods for the divine.

*Mortar – It is a ceramic bowl with very narrow – 1-2mm grooves in them for grinding small seeds like sesame.

** Pestle – in this case was special wooden one made from Sansho wood. Sansho, Japanese pepper is from Japanese prickly ash, or Zanthoxylum piperitum tree… Chef Tanahashi explained that from Ancient times it was known that this wood has properties to kill poisons, and along with salt and vinegar, was used to prevent food poisoning, etc. back when refrigeration was unavailable.   So while grinding, very very fine wood oil will seep into the sesame to make the process even more beneficial.  Unlike the regular ones at home, this wooden pestle was quite big… very solid in your hands but light enough to allow continuous grinding in circular motions possible – it’s quite a trance!

Hope he will make these tools available in US as well… or we will be looking into finding a local tree that may serve as a good substitute.  Any ideas anyone? Oh, no, as tree huggers, perhaps we shouldn’t be chopping down trees?  Only if we could replace that tree with baby trees … Having said that there’s lots of fire wood on sale on our street as our neighbor just cut down a giant tree from their back yard… sigh… Mottainai?

In reality, his way of time consuming cooking may only possible in monk’s world or as for that matter a nun’s… but to bring it into today’s context with so much yearning for the mindful, meditative, peaceful way of life, we can at least have the tools to create that or teach our kids the beauty that lies in simple pleasures of the ordinary everyday.  Why do we always need to be entertained ?  It’s yoga in the true sense.

It’s a cliche nowadays but yoga is how you live off the mat… at present, listening to the inner wisdom so what’s truly within us can shine bright.  Such teaching resonates with the kind of teaching Judith Hanson Lasater, Ph.D. shares in her precious book filled with yogic wisdom:  Living Your Yoga – Finding the Spiritual in Everyday.

 

 

 

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Beautiful People Beautiful Rituals Healthy Food

Chef Toshio Tanahashi

is here from Kyoto to teach a class on 精進料理…SHOJIN cuisine.  Shojin cooking translates to “Devotional” cuisine which is at the foundation of Japanese cuisine.   Mr. Toshio Tanahashi, a well known star chef heralded from Kyoto will be giving private and public classes. His home page will profile this much celebrated chef who has devoted his life pursuing this art of Japanese cuisine – it’s not your typical idea of Japanese cooking – No, it’s not sushi, teriyaki and tempura…which in authentic Japanese cuisine would be considered more of convenience or fast foods.

Shojin cuisine is prepared at Zen temples and monastaries by and for the monks and consists of no meat, no fish, no dairy… not even honey – no living creature harmed in process of giving you the essential nourishment to live on … to thrive on …pure vegetarian cuisine but also unique and special from other vegetarian cuisine due to its little reliance on use of oil and little spices while still enjoying a burst of flavor.  What then does its flavoring depend on?  You will know when you eat it – amazing umamii – all natural source.  Beautiful presentation is so aesthetically pleasing to the eyes… little delicate plates and bowls hand made by ceramic artists, bowls and trays of lacquer… honoring the divine within us with the healthy foods we feed our body as offerings.  It would seem nearly impossible to adhere to such Shojin style cuisine but he will bring that world to the everyday households by teaching not monks but us ordinary folks.

What is Shojin cuisine?  This article may help you realize that it’s a whole art-form of food preparation by and for the Buddhist monks that’s been passed down for centuries. Buddhist monks are sworn to non-harm, non-violence which we who study yoga will relate very well to – it’s the whole concept of Ahimsa… that is the concept at the heart of Shojin cuisine.

Photos will follow … sure to be a “ichigo- ichie” experience…