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A Tea Ceremony for Today

Posted on May 8th, 2009 by margie : Tea Ceremony Instructor margie

I found an article that was recently published in the Wall Street Journal on Tea Ceremony.  Sen So-Oku, heir to the Mushakojisenke school of tea was introduced to the U.S. and will be teaching at Columbia University for a year.

He has designed a tea room at the Koichi Yanagi Oriental Fine Arts Gallery on Manhattan's Upper East Side, with a sunken foot well similar to the foot wells in American Japanese tatami restaruants.   They refer to it as a “tea bleacher,” though that sounds so much like tea as a spectator sport.   Please go read the article.

The point Mr. Sen wants to make is one that I have been teaching my students, that tea is a living tradition.   Things change in tea not only to accommodate foreign influences, but also to the ages in which it is practiced.  In Urasenke, we have table style tea ceremonies, new configurations of tea rooms, and modern tea utensils using 21st century materials.

And yet at its essence is the human relationship of host and guest.  The sharing of food and drink and harmony among the participants as well as the awarness of the seasons that make us part of the whole universe.  A chance to slow down and remove oneself from the pressure of daily life.  Simple, and yet at the same time very much needed in our modern world.

Access_public Access: Public 2 Comments Print views (52)  
samiyam : Poet, Thinker, Nice Guy
about 3 hours later
samiyam said

Thank you for pointing out to me that the tea ceremony goes beyond the Shinto traditionalistic forms which I found so limiting in my youth.  The ceremony lives and can be flexible so that it becomes a tool for our awakening… Thank you again.

Namaste`

Samiyam

margie : Tea Ceremony Instructor
1 day later
margie said

Samiyam,
Thank you for your comment.  Even though I went through a year of rigorous traditional training in Chado in Kyoto, they also emphasized that tea ceremony has changed through the years and will continue to change.  Remember the past but not be bound by it.  The spirit of tea is alive and remains strong as long as the practitioners live it.
Take care,
Margie

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