Oryoki lunch! etc.

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  • Shohei
    Member
    • Oct 2007
    • 2854

    Oryoki lunch! etc.

    Hiyas
    For Christmas this year my wife got me a students oryoki set o/
    For my "Right This Moment Not A Resolution Just Change", I decided to eat an oryoki lunch every day at work. Why? Why not :P

    KITTING.

    I decided to do so to curb my monstrous (in portions and quality of nourishment) eating habits while at work. I decided on only brown rice and curried stir steamed veggies and dropped the pop for tea. In addition to a healthier lunch im getting a full lunch period, mostly uninterrupted and i manage to get an extra sitting in a day (a good thing too since mornings are proving less fruitful!

    Other bonuses of this have been lots of needed oryoki practice of course im still and elephant on a unicycle- oh and folks have also stopped interrupting my lunch too. I never said a word or even closed my office door (not that it ever stopped anyone - all glass doors and 2 giant windows with no blinds ). Its been going well and Its making a difference in my day to day operations at work...im much more...um approachable and definately a bit more energetic then with the normal junk lunch in rush.

    So I've been reviewing the steps and re watched the Zazenaki prep videos and such to help out. In my travels i found a helpful little pdf booklet 48 pages long on oryoki as well. I found it helpful so i thought id pass it along. May not have the best way of doing things... i really couldn't tell you as im a complete newb but its worth a peek. Perhaps Jundo or Taigu, you could say for sure - any who here is the link : http://www.upaya.org/teachings/oryoki-instructions.pdf
    Gassho
    Shohei
  • torotech
    Member
    • Aug 2008
    • 32

    #2
    Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

    Thanks.
    Will try.
    Why? Why Not.

    Kind Regards,
    Brian

    Comment

    • Dosho
      Member
      • Jun 2008
      • 5784

      #3
      Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

      Thanks Shohei!

      Comment

      • BrianW
        Member
        • Oct 2008
        • 511

        #4
        Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

        Hey Dirk,

        Thanks for posting this! My wife and daughter got me oryoki set as well. It was real show stopper on Christmas morning as they were not quite sure what it was and forgot they had bought it. So when I opened it they were as surprised as I was.

        Nice idea to eat oryoki at lunch each day. The pdf file you posted looks interesting...lots of detail.

        Gassho,
        BrianW

        Comment

        • Jundo
          Treeleaf Founder and Priest
          • Apr 2006
          • 40719

          #5
          Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

          Originally posted by Dirk
          So I've been reviewing the steps and re watched the Zazenaki prep videos and such to help out. In my travels i found a helpful little pdf booklet 48 pages long on oryoki as well. I found it helpful so i thought id pass it along. May not have the best way of doing things... i really couldn't tell you as im a complete newb but its worth a peek. Perhaps Jundo or Taigu, you could say for sure - any who here is the link : http://www.upaya.org/teachings/oryoki-instructions.pdf
          Gassho
          Shohei
          Hi Dirk,

          The way of Oryoki which we used for the two-day Retreat, and which I showed on the Zazenkai prep videos, was a down and dirty, 'wing it' version of Oryoki practice.

          DO NOT practice that way if one wants to approach true Oryoki.

          True Oryoki practice is very traditional, and very Japanese, but that is neither reason to accept or reject the practice. Many parts of our Practice are worth keeping, even if they strike someone as strange at first. Bowing, statues, incense and, yes, weird talks about Koans all fit in that category. They may seem like unnecessary "Japanese" or "Esoteric" elements at first, until you understand the role they serve....same for Rakusu/Kesa sewing. And I think Oryoki formal meal ritual is a great practice, and worth keeping.; As well, Japanese can get a bit too caught up in rigid form (I have shown videos like this many times that make fun of that ... but worth watching again and again in our Zen practice. HILARIOUS and TRUE!) ...

          http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/80510901/

          ... still, the practice of comformity to form, finding liberation in rigidity, has endless depth.

          To truly 'master' Oryoki, dozens and dozens of set movements, like a ballet, must be memorized with the 'body memory' (much like learning a dance). Oryoki is a form of moving Zazen, teaching freedom amid the confining actions. It can NEVER be done right, without mistakes. Like life. Still, we strive to master the form.

          Here are ABBREVIATED written instructions, with some photos, explaining some of the several hundred set gestures that must be learned to do Oryoki "right" ...

          Notice the delicate and precise hand placement in each photo ...

          http://www.zenriver.nl/Oryoki.htm

          I have learned it a dozen times (for about each time I have attended a formal Sesshin here in Japan) ... and promptly forgotten the fine points afterwards for lack of use every day (and so, the learning repeats each time). If you do not use the full routine each day, the body forgets.

          Oryoki is a dance, a ballet ... Oryoki is one of those additions that Zen practice picked up on its way through Japan that is worth keeping. It is a shame that a large number of "foreigners" never try to do it right, and that most teachers don't teach it that way to their non-Japanese students. I am no different in how I teach it ... I will cut corners for our retreat by necessity, although I will encourage folks to try to get as close as possible to the "right" way.

          The best book is this, the source of the Zen River instructions. (It is the fourth book down in this list)

          http://www.sotozen-net.or.jp/books/siry ... iryo01.htm

          You might email here and see if they will send you a copy (maybe at no charge)

          http://global.sotozen-net.or.jp/eng/reg ... erica.html

          I believe that Upaya instructions are a slightly (not too much) abbreviated form for Westerners, although the spirit is there.

          This book is out there too, by Trungpa's lineage (he liked Oryoki, learned from his friend Suzuki Roshi, I believe, and incorporated it in his Tibetan teachings). However, I have not read the book and cannot speak of the contents which seem to incorporate Tibetan practices.

          http://www.elephantjournal.com/2009/06/ ... lications/

          I have not found any good videos on the web, English or Japanese, that show how it is really done (including the ones I made).

          Gassho, Jundo
          ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

          Comment

          • Shohei
            Member
            • Oct 2007
            • 2854

            #6
            Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

            Thank you Jundo!
            Im going to write the us sotoshu office and ask if i could purchase a copy of that booklet.
            Im practicing with the more elaborate-stripped down way using the meal chants from the Rohatsu retreat guide dealy.
            With no correction or sometimes (Aka alot :P) confusion it is a bit of a slow process. Loved that chopstick vid

            Gassho
            Shohei

            Comment

            • ezzirah
              Member
              • Dec 2009
              • 56

              #7
              Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

              What a great idea! lunch for me is usual eaten in my cubbie while quickly chomping down whatever I happened to grab running out the door that morning. NOT GOOD. I may give this a shot this coming week.


              Thanks for posting this!

              Metta,
              Ezz

              Comment

              • bayamo
                Member
                • Nov 2009
                • 411

                #8
                Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

                GASSHO!! I was trying to find more info on tis. That booklet is great, zillion thanks Shohei dude!!
                Oh, yeah. If I didn't have inner peace, I'd go completely psycho on all you guys all the time.
                Carl Carlson

                Comment

                • Shohei
                  Member
                  • Oct 2007
                  • 2854

                  #9
                  Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

                  Hi Hi!
                  In another Thread i shared the link from sotoshu where they have images and text describing the very calculated dance. Can be a bit confusing really since the procedure is usually done with more than just one So reading these is more like learning to dance alone ...rather like those numbered feet on the floor...they are a great help...with a good dance instructor! Of course no one ever says you have to have an instructor, partner or feet to dance a good dance!

                  Da dant dant dant... da dant dant dant....


                  Gassho
                  Shohei

                  Comment

                  • Jundo
                    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                    • Apr 2006
                    • 40719

                    #10
                    Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

                    Sometime this year ... on the "to do/to non-do" list ... is my making a film showing all the movements of Oryoki in its full, traditional form.

                    We do a very quick, simplified, down and dirty version for our annual retreat ... but the traditional way is a ballet. It is a wonderful practice, one of the practices that the Japanese developed that, I believe, is worth keeping even though it is "old and traditional".

                    It just takes a little practice to get it into the body memory, and then one dances and is danced without giving it a thought.

                    Gassho, J
                    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

                    Comment

                    • sittingzen
                      Member
                      • May 2010
                      • 188

                      #11
                      Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

                      Great thread. I am planning on purchasing a set, and slowly learn the abbreviated version during my lunch time. What a wonderful way to "sit" during what typically is a stressful, hectic, work day.
                      Shinjin datsuraku, datsuraku shinjin..Body-mind drop off, mind-body drop off..

                      Comment

                      • Keishin
                        Member
                        • Jun 2007
                        • 471

                        #12
                        Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

                        hellos to all posting here

                        traditions keep going because there are persons who continue them

                        traditions have a wisdom to them, this wisdom is born out of the circumstances in which they arose

                        it is not always easy to understand--for example certain gestures arise because of the clothing worn--if you have long sleeves, you must attend to not dragging them across and into things--

                        but there is something also about the novelty aspect of what I call 'zen toys'
                        sure, enjoy the novelty to the hilt, explore the 'toys' thoroughly
                        take the toys to work
                        sleep with them next to you
                        wake up and see them first thing
                        hold them with appreciation

                        infatuation is a kind of drunkenness, dulling and heightening experiences simultaneously, specific and general, unique and generic
                        This bowl, Any bowl, Every bowl

                        your very own cupped hands as 'bowl'


                        this bowl--this special gift, in support of my practice, given by friends, by family
                        any bowl--I have picked for this purpose, this object used for these prescribed movements in prescribed manner
                        every bowl--ever encountered in my past, my present, every bowl not yet manufactured awaiting my future use; all are 'oryoki'

                        my own cupped hands--the first bowl/cup that ever was!--these hands, and all these hands....

                        In attending multiple day sessions the function of rohatsu/oryoki (meals together) becomes apparent: eating together in a way that continues 'sitting' same as kinhin allows a group of people to take a bathroom break and stretch legs in a way which continues 'sitting'

                        eating oryoki by oneself is kind of like being one oarsman on an empty viking ship
                        the spirit of oryoki: togetherness, action.
                        there is more oryoki, to my way of thinking, if you joined your coworkers for lunch, if you opened your sandwich from home as they opened theirs, and if you shared your bag of chips (crisps for the Anglos out there). I want to practice my chopsticks? I can take 'em to the lunchroom or to the pub with me. I can pick up those french fries or my pickles from home with them, "Hey" I can tell the others "I want to get better at using these things!"
                        these zen toys in the end aren't to set me apart from and aren't to make me different or special
                        zen is the most inclusive thing I know

                        and what do I know?

                        not much, I assure you!

                        Comment

                        • Shohei
                          Member
                          • Oct 2007
                          • 2854

                          #13
                          Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

                          ^^ i completely agree!
                          I just needed to practice oryoki in some kinda preparation. As you pointed out though its very much a loan being in a boat with many oars!

                          Thank you

                          Gassho
                          Shohei

                          Comment

                          • Keishin
                            Member
                            • Jun 2007
                            • 471

                            #14
                            Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

                            PS Shohei:

                            Is 'skullday' picture posted a real dance?

                            I hope our oryoki bowls get to take us with them to places where there are others who use them too!

                            Comment

                            • Shohei
                              Member
                              • Oct 2007
                              • 2854

                              #15
                              Re: Oryoki lunch! etc.

                              Ha I wondered too - Its a dance if you can swing it. I am all thumbs when it comes to dancing ops:

                              Gassho
                              Shohei

                              Comment

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