“Rain!” the forecast said
light blue sky peeks through the clouds
forlorn umbrella
“Rain!” the forecast said
light blue sky peeks through the clouds
forlorn umbrella
back at the tea space
meeting old friends and new friends
this moment is all
-on attending “Hatsugama”*
This meeting is seen as something very special. Hatsugama is the only time when the tea teacher him or herself prepares tea for all her students. In most cases this tea ceremony is a complete Chaji meeting with Kaiseki meal, Nakadachi breaks, and the whole ritual done the way it was learned during classes. It is impossible to teach the whole Chaji at once, therefor it is always broken up into practicing how to prepare Usucha, Koicha, and arranging the charcoal in Sumidemae. Only this time will the whole ritual be performed by the tea teacher with some help of his or her students. It is an opportunity to meet all the other students whom might be studying on different days and for the teacher to point out some of the details about the flow of a full Chaji meeting. Typical for this meeting is the festive mood, exquisite cuisine, and the curved braided willow branches hung in the alcove.
Source: http://japanese-tea-ceremony.net/types_ceremony.html
“rainy and breezy”
hot chocolate-colored water
overflows stream banks
dark skies overhead
happy little umbrella
the world seems brighter
fuzzy mossy trees
glow green in the overcast
Oregon winter
just got a cold
felt better, resumed rushing
back to the sniffles
-on catching a 3rd cold this season
read Jocko Willink
‘fear doesn’t get a vote’ now
back to the writing
-on reading “Discipline Equals Freedom Field Manual” by Jocko Willink
Young Adult novel
“Pride and Prejudice”-inspired
predictable fun
-on reading “Rebel Mechanics”
Costco employees
raved about every item
in our check-out cart
-Seriously, they did.
“Ooh, I love that!” “Oh, isn’t that awesome?” “You’re gonna love that!”
handmade woolen socks
belated Christmas present
a delighted Mom
-I don’t knit, but I have a good friend who does
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