Video

Breakfast chant, September 22nd 2013

Breakfast is called “shukuza” in Japanese Zen monastery, which can loosely be translated as the “gruel session”. In Antaiji though, we have brown rice, miso soup and two side dishes for breakfast, to give us the strength necessary for samu. Here you can see us recite part of the morning chant:

Hitotsu ni wa ko no tasho o hakari kano raisho o hakaru.
Futatsu ni wa onore ga tokugyo no zenketto hakatte ku ni ozu.
Mitsu ni wa shin o fusegi toga o hanaruru ko to wa tonto o shu to su.
Yotsu ni wa masa ni ryoyaku o koto to suru wa gyoko o ryozen ga tame nari.
Itsutsu ni wa jodo no tame no yue ni ima kono jiki o uku.

Jiten kijinshu, gokin suji kyu
suji hen jiho, ishi kijin kyu

Jo bun san bo, chu bun shion
gekyu roku do, kai do kuyo
ik-ku idan is-sai aku
niku ishu is-sai zen
sanku ido shoshu jo
kaigu jo butsu do

More info at:

Breakfast chants and Rules for eating

High noon on a free day at Antaiji, September 21st 2013

Back in Antaiji, September 21st

Back in Antaiji, the first rice field has been harvested. The sounds that you can hear at the beginning of the video are the voices of dear that can be heared a lot in autumn, especially in the morning hours. They are in heat during this time of the year.

Meeting Shinto priest Florian Wiltschko in Shibuya, September 20th 2013

9:30 am in Shinagawa. I avoided the rush hour.

Even funnier than watching the monkeys at the zoo is observing these humans on the loose (Kodo Sawaki)

Today I visited an Austrian Shinto priest in Shibuya, Florian Wiltschko:

They finished harvesting rice in Shibuya as well.

Could make out Antaiji from the plane on the way to Tottori.

Back in the country side. You can park your car for free here as long as you like.

Rice harvest and panel discussion, September 19th 2013

To make the best use of the nice weather we have these days, we got up and started with the harvest first thing this morning at 5am, before sun rise.. The plan is to finish the first field by tonight, allowing us to do a one day sesshin tomorrow. The other two fields still need time for the rice to ripen.

Ante from Australia is leaving Antaiji today. After dropping him off at Tottori station, I am checking in at the airport to go to Tokyo.

Quite a different atmosphere at Shinagawa:

A couple of minute of zazen in my hotel room:

The panel discussion took place from 6am to 8am. I will be uploaded on the channel https://www.youtube.com/user/BukkyoDendoKyokai during the next days.

Soji (wiping the floor), September 18th 2013

Cleaning is done every morning, right after breakfast:

Four of us went to help with the rice harvest at a different temple in Tottori prefecture today. Therefore, Antaiji’s harvest will have to wait for another day. Yesterday we harvested only about 20% of the southern rice field. The rest is planned foo tomorrow.

Shoko from Germany, who can be seen wiping the floor in the video above, has a Google+ account with many Antaiji pictures:

https://plus.google.com/u/2/116218708782376154359/posts

Also, a radio crew came today for an interview. It will be broadcast in the Kansai area on October 12th and 19th, 7am to 7:15 (558Khz). Some pictures might be uploaded shortly on the interviewers FB page:

https://www.facebook.com/TamaokaKaoru

Fine weather, lots of work, September 17th 2013

Another typhoon has passed, and we have good weather again.

The rice in the southern field has fallen over again, wo we decided to start harvesting today.

The soil in the field is still swampy, therefore we tie the rice on a plastic sheet outside the field. from there it will be transported to the haza construction to dry in the sun.

In the vegetable garden, the weather is just right to plow.

In another area, we are planting the Chinese cabbage for winter food.

And in the Zen garden, Shoko shows where a hole needs to be dug to plant lotus flowers next spring.

From today, Tsukan will be tenzo for the next five days, September 16th 2013

The tenzo (cook) changes every five days, after each sesshin. Tsukan from Oregon will be tenzo for the next five days, and today he is preparing an Italian style lunch. Steffi from Germany helps cutting bell peppers.

One day sesshin, September 15th 2013

The view:

The weather:

Yudai’s dharma talk, September 14th 2013

On the days before one day sesshins (the 9th, 14th, 19th and 24th, starting at 6pm), the practioners take terms lecturing on “Shobogenzo Zuimonki“. Today, Yudai is lecturing on chapter 3-3. Usually, a dharma talks takes about 90 to 120 minutes maximum, but tonight a lot of the foreign practioners took place in the discussion, which ended only after 9pm.
Here is the first part of Yudai’s talk which concentrated on tenzo work and the vegetables in the garden.

English text:
http://global.sotozen-net.or.jp/common_html/zuimonki/03-03.html

Yudai reads Kaikyoge, followed by text in original Japanese, English translation and first minutes of his Japanese talk:

First minutes of English talk: