Sunday, March 26, 2006

Hey Buddha
This weekend, several teachers and i travelled far and great distances to experience a buddist temple stay at the Haeinsa Temple near Daegu. This is one of those things that foreigners do in Korea, much like visiting the DMZ, that contributes to the greater cultural experience and understanding, dispite it not being fun (
fun being defined as 'behaviour or activity that is intended purely for amusement and should not be interpreted as having serious purposes'... quite similar to this blog).

Here's a sample of our temple stay schedule:
(Saturday evening - Sunday afternoon)
Saturday
pm. 5:30 - Dinner
Dinner consisted of plain white rice, kim chi (spicy fermented cabbage as referred to in previous bloggings), and some tofu and veg in a colourless broth. As we found out a bit to too late, there is not supposed to be any talking during the meal, and when we were finished eating, we had to rinse out our bowls with cold water, and then drink it to avoid any wast. Just joking... but only about the drinking our dish water.
6:30 - Evening Ritual Ceremony
This was basically 3 hours of chanting and bowing. I stayed for about 45 minutes... and didn't partake in the chanting or bowing. The thing that was interesting about this was that, I hadn't realized how ritualistic and worship based a religion Buddhism was. Unfortunately, even though we were there to learn and expereince a bit about Buddhism, no one actually explained to us what all the fuss was about.
9:00 - Bed time and lights out
Here's a picture of my bed.
Basically, surpassing the lap of luxury. If luxury is a bare concrete floor.
We also shared this room with approximately 25 lola's (grandmother's). They were all very kind to us though and helped us settle in... and they gave us candy.

Sunday
am. 3:00 - rising
3:00 - morning ritual ceremony (another 2.5 hours of chanting and bowing)
I opted out of both of these activities... resonably guilt free.
6:10 - Breakfast
White rice and seeweed... quite nice actually.
After Breakfast we did a short hike to another temple. Incline walking before 7am is something i've decided i can live quite happily without.
9:00 - 11:00 - morning nap (this was my own addition to the schedule)
10:00 - Ritual ceremony
Unfortunately I missed this due to the aforementioned alteration to the original schedule.
11:20 - Lunch (you should know what to expect by now)

After lunch we took a gander around the temple grounds. Haeinsa is actually one of the more famouse temples in Korea. It is an official UNESCO site and home to the Tripitaka Koreana. All in all it was not a bad weekend. I was a failure on several fronts, as far as ritual ceremony attendence was concerned, but it was definately worth seeing and doing in the end. Plus, some of those Buddist Monks were surprisingly handsome.


2 comments:

DJ said...

You're blog is funnier then I thought it would be. I wasn't sure how one would make a weekend of avoiding monks and chanting funny?

Anonymous said...

HAHAHAHAH Jenn this one killed me almost as much as one of the first blogs you wrote about the bathhouse and the near nipple graising! I am especially giggly after really thinking that you were expected to drink the water you rinsed your dish with. hahaha it wouldnt surprise me if that was expected.
Coco Joe