Just seeing the location pretty much convinced me I was in fact a Buddhist on the spot. There is in the Christian tradition a place for wilderness retreats and private prayer, but it is obviously vastly different from the contemplative practice of meditation practiced in these small huts. Or is it? I am convinced that when Mo says she is almost never unhappy, she is not lying. As a Westerner I am so prejudiced to my own sensibility that I want to think that the Thais here are merely sublimating frustration and desire, but after three months I can say that is not so. They navigate the world in such a different craft that the words are almost inapplicable. It is not as if Mo is a spaced out laid back hippie. In fact she is so busy with her practice and her career studies I hardly ever get to see or talk to her. Ironically, what I want to talk to her about is her practice of meditation which is at the root of her peacefulness, but she is too busy! There does seem to be a very different sense of the public and the private aspects of Buddhism as it is practiced in Isan and the Christianity I know at home.

This temple is outside of Pla Plak, where I did my orientation, set amongst lovely woods. Everyone was dressed in all white and they had come in droves to spend between one and three nights sleeping in the out of doors on mats under canopies. One of the first things I noticed was all the elderly, white haired people. While not dominant in percentage as they are in most of the Christian churches I have ever been in, you just don't see that many white heads as you go about in Isan. I think the elderly just stay indoors. Anyway this line was a revolving clothes line that reached up to the peak of the temple. You attached money to it and said prayers for whomever and then it was hoisted upwards, where Rambo told me it would do more good.
Facing the other direction this is what you saw. This is where they were going to erect a large Buddha statue, and the purpose of the fund raising effort. In Isan the bigger the Buddha the better, and you quickly get used to seeing some enormous examples. Though the people were behind this fence they were free to go in front of it to wander in the area where the foundation for the statue was and which contained a large fire. It wouldn't be Isan if there weren't a large fire involved! Today by the way, I had to laugh when a young woman I met said she liked Isan better than BKK because the air was so much cleaner!
The large turnout was due to the head monk, seated in the center below. After so much hubub, I was taken aback by his youth. Rambo explained that he had risen quickly and also told me that he had passed the very highest exams, which took me aback as well. As in Christian churches, a temple's fate often follows the charisma of its leader. This young man had been acknowledged by the king himself with a gift of some of the king's clothing, which imparted a resounding endorsement in the eyes of the locals.
He really did have a palpable aura, a radiating sense of calm and indescribable alertness to him. That he managed to be compelling and dynamic without moving is beyond me. Perhaps I was simply swept up in the spectacle of the overall gathering. But still, there he was in his simple orange robe on a table top... Then Rambo and I walked around the rest of the grounds, There was this extension of a shrine out onto a pond, another common sight at a wat. There is Big Bear Rambo on the outside....
And this is the wild statue that was housed within. I am not sure who or what it was, but those are the actual lighting conditions(yes that is glitter on the statue!). It was balanced precariously on a tightrope between exquisite and ridiculous, and it tickled me no end.
So am I ready to "convert" to Buddhism? I certainly have no idea. I know that living here I can really look at people like Jes, my field director and a long time, deeply reflective Buddhist, with nothing less than respect and admiration, just as I do all reflective and honestly seeking Christians, trying their best to chart the waters of life. I tried my best to explain to my older students, in a completely non-proselytizing manner, the origins of the celebration of Christmas. I put it this way; Most of you are Buddhists, yes? So you know the story of Buddha, how he left his home and went into the wilderness and he became aware of how things really are? Well in Christianity there is also a story, and it is about a boy who was born in a special way and Christians believe he was really the son of god and he came to tell people how things really are. And so Christians celebrate the day that boy named Jesus was born. Fortunately I had Boom who went to a Christian primary school, though she is a Buddhist, there at NYS to translate it for me, and I had Leudee at Thai Samakee, who is a practicing Catholic to translate there. Who knows what they got? They looked at me pretty seriously while I was talking, but that might have been because it was one of the few times I have not been antic and goofy, and they were worried I might be dying or something. Anyhoo, then we did vocabulary like sleigh and star and I showed them pictures of my boys from long ago with snowmen which made me lonesome for a handful of the stuff and made me realize that 99% of the faces I was facing would live and die without ever seeing what I was describing.
So we made our own snowflakes, which is the ulitimate, ultimate Thai kids project with their love of detail and projects, and we listened to Jingle Bell Rock, which, if we're lucky, they will know by Christmas.
I extend to all my family, friends, and the strangers who do and do not read this blog, believers and non-believers and seekers such as myself, all of you carrying the water this Christmas, my love and wishes for peace.
Merry Xmas Peter... I also have been wondering about the role of faiths in navigating our way through life. Still a pretty dedicated blue-domer here... with a strong sense that science explains a lot of stuff, but also in love with these old stories from all the faith traditions, and with the practice of deliberate observation and movement. hmmmm. SOunds like you are having an interesting time of it. Cheers!
ReplyDeleteHey Peter,Sending you a Xmas Hello from the hilltop. A young man, red hair, beautiful smile and handing out hugs,has arrived at our house for a few days!It is wonderful to see him again. I enjoy reading your blogs ( I have THOUGHT I have posted comments to you - but somehow they don't show up..?!) I am loving the way you write.
ReplyDeleteLove to you this Xmas,Kalla,Bill and Alex