Hi all,
Here is the recording of the second meeting of the Oryoki Circle:
Great to practice with you all.
Gassho,
Myozan
Hi all,
Here is the recording of the second meeting of the Oryoki Circle:
Great to practice with you all.
Gassho,
Myozan
Last edited by Myozan Kodo; 02-02-2014 at 08:06 PM.
Thank you Myozan. I hope to see you then.
gassho, Shokai
Sent from my Note 2 using Tapatalk4
合掌,生開
gassho, Shokai
仁道 生開 / Jindo Shokai
"Open to life in a benevolent way"
https://sarushinzendo.wordpress.com/
Thank you Myozan for this information and your guidance. =)
Gassho
Shingen
Thank you.
Gassho,
Myosha
"Recognize suffering, remove suffering." - Shakyamuni Buddha when asked, "Uhm . . .what?"
Thank you, Myozan. My laptop is still unreliable so I am going to work along with the recordings for now.
Gassho
Kokuu
Hi all,
This will be a Hangout On Air starting in about an hour's time (7:15PM GMT). See you then.
Gassho
Myozan
Hello,
Thank you. Talking to the screen during simulcast. All together.
Gassho,
Myosha
"Recognize suffering, remove suffering." - Shakyamuni Buddha when asked, "Uhm . . .what?"
The 20 movements I've broken down Opening the Bowls into:
Oryoki 1: Opening the Bowls
Chants X 2
To Open
1: Spread left and right out
2: Drying cloth: Z and flip
3: Clockwise utensils (flipped cloth; bag; waterboard)/ right hand top) opening to
left
4: Open napkin and on knees
5: Open front flap; then back (make star shape)
6: Right side star; left side star
7: Open Hattan; place under bowls; bowls to left
8: Dish under Buddha bowl (use thumbs)
9: Two little bowls on right
10: Bowl on top
11: Last (number 2) bowl in middle
12: Drying cloth up with right hand
13: Left hand: take up utensils
14: Replace drying cloth with right
15: Work out tools; make Z (setu on left; spoon middle; chopsticks right)
16: Fold Z with left hand
17: Chopsticks out (points in middle; handle left)
18: Spoon out (handle left; bowl open; closest to body)
19: Setsu out (flip between bowls 2 and 3)
20: Put utensil cover, opening to right; sandwiched in waterboard and drying
cloth)
... and the bowls are open
Gassho
Myozan
Excellent, thanks for posting this Myozan. =)
Gassho
Shingen
Just a note, that I'm following you Myozan and you other guys,
its not my time to be live with you, but I much appreciate the efforts and its much of pleasure actually to work though this!
Thank you and _()_
Myoku
I will be sitting with you, opening the bowls tonight. Thank you for this.
Gassho,
Daijo
Hello everyone, looks like my bowls came in, so I will take some photos and let you see. =)
Gassho
Shingen
Will practice this when my bowls arrive. Missed yesterday! Gassho.
Heisoku 平 息
Every day is a journey, and the journey itself is home. (Basho)
Thank you, you broke it down perfectly!
Got some large sheets of black paper (12x18 if I recall) and lacquer this week. Two coats of lacquer in, I am either making a passable hattan, or a mess. Not sure which yet. Will post pictures in the next few days if it goes well.
Gassho,
Sekishi
Sekishi | 石志 | He/him | Better with a grain of salt, but best ignored entirely.
Sekishi,
That sounds great. Looking forward to seeing them.
Deep bows
Myozan
Thank you Myozan for part two. I am all caught up and hopefully will be with you tomorrow . Gassho.
Heisoku 平 息
Every day is a journey, and the journey itself is home. (Basho)
PS my new bowl set arrived with black cloths. hope this isn't a problem?
Gassho.
Heisoku 平 息
Every day is a journey, and the journey itself is home. (Basho)
Hi. Not a problem. May they serve you well.
Gassho
Myozan
Here is a quick, pretty shaky phone pic. The paper is absorbing quite a bit of lacquer. The three sheets here are:
1. Original black construction paper.
2. One coat of lacquer.
3. Three coats of lacquer (the darkest one).
I am thinking that four coats will be the charm... Will find out later today. ^_^
Gassho,
Eric
uploadfromtaptalk1391891921030.jpg
Sent from my S4 via Tapatalk4
Sekishi | 石志 | He/him | Better with a grain of salt, but best ignored entirely.
Eric
Looking good. Great job. Jundo says that 'construction paper' works well as well. Not sure what we call that in Europe ... but when I ask for that in shops here, they don't know what I'm asking for. But that shouldn't be a problem state-side.
Gassho
Myozan
Yes looking great Eric ... Can you tell me the type/name of the lacquer you used?
Gassho
Shingen
Myozan - "Construction paper" is basically a soft thick paper (although not as thick as card stock or even watercolor paper) with a soft fibrous finish (lots of wood pulp I guess). In the US it is usually dyed with different colors for use in craft projects. I'm not sure what you should ask for, but the label includes Spanish and French:
- Cartulina extragruesa multiusos
- Papier de bricolage universal epais
If you cannot find any, let me know and I'll send you some (I bought a 50 sheet pack when I got mine).
Shingen - I went with a spray-on lacquer (I was thinking it would be easier to put on in thin layers to avoid wrinkling). It is an 11oz can of Rustoleum Black Lacquer Spray - #1905830.
Update after the forth application: very little of this layer soaked in, so it is finally looking smooth, shiny, and reflective. I think the real test now will be what happens when it gets folded (will it crack and flake off?). Anyhow, I'll keep you all informed!
Gassho,
Sekishi
Last edited by Sekishi; 02-09-2014 at 01:07 AM. Reason: typooos
Sekishi | 石志 | He/him | Better with a grain of salt, but best ignored entirely.
Awesome, thanks Eric and yes keep us posted! =)
Gassho
Shingen
Well guys, here is what I learned about lacquer. After 5 layers (sprayed) per side, with 48 hours to dry between coats, I had a beautiful, smooth finish that was water repellant. The natural roughness of the paper caused bumps and roughness as the layers built up. So I used some #0000 (really fine) steel wool to gently smooth the surface out, before doing one last coat.
I am not sure what caused it (maybe one side was not totally dry), but when I left the last coat on the second side to dry, the first side ended up completely and totally stuck / formed / glued to the cardboard I had been using as a protective layer. I utterly destroyed it trying to peel it off. ^_^
So I am starting over. This time I cut it to 9.5 x 15 inches. With the extra length I am using paper clips to hang it between coats. When finished I will cut off the extra. I am also trying 10 minutes between coats. Basically it is my understanding that with lacquer, you either do many coats with a few minutes between, or you let it dry completely between coats.
Anyhow, will let you know what I learn this time around!
Gassho,
Sekishi / Eric
Sekishi | 石志 | He/him | Better with a grain of salt, but best ignored entirely.
Eric,
If it turns out to be a hassle, I really wouldn't worry about it. As Myozan told us once, the only ones in the West who use the paper are typically priests who have trained in Japan. I'm glad (and impressed) you gave it a shot, but no need to go further I think.
Gassho,
Dosho
Hi Dosho,
Thank you for that, but unless you think I actually should not try, I do not mind saying "oops" and starting over (I already have the materials). I actually did 5 really thin coats (front and back this time) this morning before the oryoki circle. It looks like a good start.
Anyhow, I don't mind putting the time into it. I like being "crafty" anyhow, and if I learn anything that might be helpful to others in the future, even better. However, if you think I should not do it, that is fine too.
Gassho,
Sekishi / Eric
Sekishi | 石志 | He/him | Better with a grain of salt, but best ignored entirely.
Hi Eric,
I'm with Dosho on this. You display great commitment to practice. You have offered us a teaching in this. Deep bows to you ... and no need to worry about a Hattan ... but, since I think it is more the joy of practice than a burden for you ... then we will continue to follow your efforts with interest and gratitude.
That's my humble opinion.
Myozan
Last edited by Myozan Kodo; 03-02-2014 at 11:14 PM.
I am only just getting around to watching these. Thank you so much, Myozan, and everyone else. This is a great resource.
Gassho
Andy