Posts Tagged ‘gift’

Kathina is an once a year occasion when people offer fabric to the community of monks. (Detailed description of Kathina at the end of post.) This year at Buddhist Temple of America (Wat Bhuridattavanaram) the ceremony is on Sunday, October 28. Like the previous years, the King of Thailand will send a representative to present his offerings.

Alms-round starts at 9:30am. People will offer food to the monks. The monks will then give blessings to the laypeople. After which the laypeople begin morning chants while the monks eat their meal. People usually start making individual offerings after the monks finish their meal. Items like medicine, soap, towels, donations, etc. But the main ceremony will start around 1pm. The King’s representative will begin by presenting the King’s offerings first.

Many people set up hot food stands on the temple ground. They prepare delicious food on the spot and share it freely with the visitors. Come join us and experience the spirit of giving. You don’t have to bring anything. There will be steamed rice prepared if you want to offer food to the monks during the alms-round at 9:30am. Come and participate in the ceremonies. Or come if you are just curious. :-) Ask me if there’s any question.

KATHINA
(Taken from Metta Forest Monastery’s web site)

The month after the Rains-retreat is the kathina season. In the time of the Buddha, this was the month when monks would prepare their requisites for the up-coming eight-month period when they could wander and meditate freely in the wilderness. These preparations would include patching their old robes or sewing new ones if the old ones were beyond repair. Lay supporters thus took the opportunity to provide the monks with cloth at this time, and the Buddha established the custom of the kathina, in which donors would present cloth to a community of monks as a whole. The monks would then make the cloth into a robe within that day and present it to one of their members whose robes were old and worn, or who was deserving in any other way. (The name “kathina” comes from the frame over which the cloth could be stretched while it was sewn, much like the frame used in a quilting bee.)

The texts do not say why the Buddha established this custom, but a few moments’ reflection will show that it promotes the virtue of cooperation among the monks and affords the opportunity for senior monks to pass on their sewing skills to more junior monks-skills very important for anyone who has few possessions and wants to be unburdensome to others. To encourage the monks to maintain this custom, the Buddha allowed them to enjoy certain privileges-i.e., to temporarily be freed from certain minor rules-for the remaining four months.

Because the kathina ceremony may be held only during one month of the year, and only once a year in any one monastery, it is considered a very special opportunity for donors to join in and develop the virtue of generosity together.

Note: Metta Forest Monastery is located in San Diego County. It was founded by the Ven. Ajaan Suwat, who also founded Buddhist Temple of America. The current Abbot, Ven. Ajaan Geoffrey Thanissaro is well-known for his English translations of Pali and Thai Buddhist texts. This year Kathina ceremony is held on November 4th at Metta Forest Monastery.

Every year a certain person commissions an artist to create a piece of art as a holiday gift to friends. This year’s edition arrived a couple of days ago.

Looks like an ordinary photo album, no? Now see what it looks like opened:


Do you see what’s going on? It’s wonderful. Here’s what’s on a note that came with the piece.

Peter Coffin was born in Berkeley, California in 1972 and currently resides in New York City. His installations, sculptures, and photographs playfully explore social paradigms and perceptions of reality. Coffin’s work invites the viewer to observe and interact with nebulous principles such as memory, association, and interpretation, sometimes evoking the chimera of new age theory or fringe science. For this year’s project, Coffin presents a seemingly ordinary photo Album, which, when opened, expands into a constellations of found photographs linked by the image of a rainbow that spirals through each scene. In the spirit of iconic works by Robert Smithson, Vladimir Tatlin, Bruce Nauman, and Mario Merz, the spiral is a link to an infinity beyond our reach and serves as a symbol of the creative process.

Here are a couple of more pieces from the years passed:



Mary Frances is a sweet lady. She reminds me of Sophia, “ma”, from the Golden Girls. I took a bag of unginned cotton to the guild meeting last month. (Oh my gosh, it’s December already.) I was just sitting there, separating the fiber from the seeds. (I gave away lots of seeds that day.) Mary Frances came over to see what I was doing. As it turned out, she was quite an expert. She quickly showed me a few tricks to keep the fiber soft and fluffy. She also made a comment, “what is this stuff? It’s so dirty.”

Yes, I admit, it has a lot of bits and pieces of the “husk” in it. But I don’t mind, they will probably fall off during spinning.

Mary Frances went on to tell me that she grew her own cotton. Varieties of them. “Do you want some?” she asked. Ding! Of course I did. She got my address and promised to send some. It came in the mail yesterday.

I was expecting a big bag of cotton for spinning. Now I know she really meant to send me some seeds to grow my own plants. :lol: Silly greedy me! I didn’t feel any bit of disappointment though. Not at all. It was a thrill to see different cotton fiber in it’s natural form.

She sent me three kinds of cotton fiber. Top left is from an 8-year-old plant that is now a tree. It is the softest and fluffiest of the bunch. The white fiber is from Thai cotton plant. It feels a bit coarse. But that will probably change when it’s fluffed out a bit. Top right is from “Workshop Door”. (Anyone knows what that is?) Two different colors. The darker orange tan is really beautiful.

There are lots of seeds in them. I wonder if they can be grown in Northern California?

Thank you Mary Frances! I can’t wait to see you at the next meeting to thank you in person. :-) Oh, can I come see your cotton plants?

Thanks Micah, my friend. You made two guys very very happy. One who received the beautiful work of art. And one who gets to wear them. :-) A neighbor of ours suggested that I felt them a little to fit my hands, but my partner screamed “NO!” They fit him perfectly and the color is one of his favorites. Mine too, but there’s no getting them back from him. :-)

Tomorrow is the Kathina ceremony at our temple. I am heading out soon to spend the night there and to make offerings tomorrow.


A quick progress report on my Dulaan knitting:

1. One Cameo Faggot Stitch Scarf in Rowan Big Wool. Thanks to Gerald for donating the yarn, and TallGuy for pointing out the pattern.

2. One pair of Mittens done in Classic Elite Maya (yarn donated by Gerald). Pattern from Ann Budd’s The Knitter’s Handy Book of Patterns.

3. One double thick hat. The yarn is Bernat’s Softee Chunky. Pattern by Norma. I made it larger.

4. One hat in Rowan Big Wool (yarn donated by Gerald). Work in progress. Pattern from Ann Budd’s The Knitter’s Handy Book of Patterns.