Wat Nong Pah Pong is the
monastery founded by Ajahn Chah, whom I’ve heard of many times. A lot of the
well known Western lay teachers came to Asia in the 1970s and learned from him,
then brought the teachings and this linage back to the west. The founders of
Spirit Rock name him as their teacher and Amaravati, the monastery where the Aloka Vihara Sisters lived as Siladara (10
precept nuns) for close to 20 years is art of the Ajahn Chah lineage.
I spent the last 5 days living
with the Mae Chee (8 precept nuns) and other Upasika here in Northeast Thailand
and had a glimpse of what life is like for them. Note: an Upasika is an
unordained woman who undertakes the 8 precepts and lives in a monastery for a
limited period of time. I am at this moment, and have been during certain
periods of time this past year, been an Upasika.
Ayya and I were the only farang
(foreigners) I saw on the bus here, in the 2 towns we spent a little time in
while in transit from Bangkok and here at the Wat. Needless to say a farang
Bhikkhuni and her butch “Sancho Panza” get noticed, everywhere…
Wat Nong Pah Pong is a large, well
supported monastery on beautiful forested grounds. Much of Isan (this area of
Thailand) was forested like this but almost all of the forested areas, except
for the monasteries, has been clear cut to create rice paddies and farmland.
Ayya and I arrived outside the large
wall which encloses the monastery to a few busloads of teenage school children on
field trips and a row of vendors, all selling EXACTLY the same food items (colored sugared coconut, pork skins, banana
chips and cookies similar to coconut pirouettes).
Once inside the gate there is a
map of the compound and a multi story, modern building which serves as the Ajahn
Chah museum. An odd assemblage of items are contained there; Ajahn Chah’s teeth
(2 sets!), his wheel chair, Buddha rupas (statues), skeletons and I can’t even
remember what else.
The Mae Chee’s quarter is at the
back of the property and hosts about 20 -30 structures including a few houses, numerous
kutis, the women’s sala (temple) and the outdoor kitchen.
Because Ayya spent a Vassa (rains
retreat) here 15 year ago she knows some of the Mae Chee; the head Mae Chee remembered
her, greeted her warmly and invited us to stay.
The first thing was to get me attired
appropriately. All Upasika wear a long black skirt fastened with a belt, white
short sleeved shirt and white sash which covers the breasts. Ayya of course had
to teach me how to get dressed. She laughed at me a bit, knowing I had not worn
a skirt since my corporate working days 25 years ago. She said I looked nice
this way, that this form of dress suited me. When I came out of the house where
I was changing the head Mae Chee laughed and said (in Thai) “now you look like
a girl!!”. I just laughed, butch is butch in every culture…
We were provided very nice
accommodations, a double kuti (one structure with 2 rooms separated by a wall) each
with it’s own indoor bathroom. Each room had typical Thai features; tiled floor
to keep things cooler and cleaner from the forest dirt, wooden platform with
straw mat for a bed, lots of windows with screens on them, electricity. The
bathrooms had a western toilet as opposed to a Thai style squat toilet, but it
doesn’t flush, after use you pour a pail of water into it.
The days start very, very early
here. We wake at 2:30 am and attend morning puja from 3 – 4:30 am. The first 45
minutes or so consist of chanting in TWO languages I don’t understand.
Alternating lines of Pali (the Buddhist scriptural language) and it’s Thai
translation.
Because the morning and evening
chants are always the same I am familiar with the Pali words, have chanted them
quite a lot this past year at the Vihara. I recognize the distinct Pali words
and know that the chants are paying homage to Buddha, Dharma and Sangha. Although
I don’t understand what is being said per se, I understand what is being said.
Since I can’t chant (no English language chant sheets) I use this experience as
sound meditation. I take in the energy, hear the words as sound, try to keep
mind focused so I can bow at the appropriate times.
After morning puja (5:00 am) Ayya
and I help the others clean the Chedi (a stupa which is a shrine to Ajahn Chah
containing his relics and an alter). It’s a big, beautiful circular structure;
painted gold on the outside, black marble on the inside. We arrive well before
dawn, little Thai brooms in hand. Ayya and I always arrive first, in the dark,
quiet. This morning the still almost full moon was peeking through the clouds
(it’s more orange in color here then at home), the creatures of the forest the
only sound in the predawn light. Very soothing one of the many pleasant karma
yoga duties I’ve performed this year.
After about an hour of sweeping
and mopping we are finished and have free time, I usually do some asana
practice. At about 8:00 am we take our bowls (Ayya’s her personal alms bowl
always brought with her, mine a big metal salad type bowl used by the Upasika
here) and walk barefoot for about 10 minutes down a beautiful wooded lane to
the main kitchen to receive the only meal offered each day.
There is a difference at this
particular monastery between having one meal offered per day and eating
once per day. The meal is offered at 8:30 am (more about the form in another blog
entry) however, monastics are allowed to eat until solar noon, so I watch all
the Mae Chee and Upasika pull out plastic bags in preparation for receiving
their meal.
This is a very well supported
monastery so there is an abundance of variety and quantity of food offered. There
is a strict hierarchy of who takes food when. First the monks take their food,
then the male Upasika, then Ayya since she is a Bikhunni, then the Mae Chee,
then the Upasika (me). Finally, the lay people who have come to offer food and
share the meal take absolutely everything that is left.
Most of the food is
unrecognizable to me, a conglomeration of items I have never seen before. The
food is laid out in a particular order. First big pots of rice, regular and
sticky (everyone uses their hands to take the sticky, I use the scoop and take
the regular). Then the main dishes, 99% of which contain meat.
A curry or two
and a vast array of things I just have no clue about but I suspect taste quite
good. Then come the vegetables (again many I’ve never seen before), hard boiled
eggs (my only protein here so I eat them every day) and lots of little plastic
bags filled with mystery food, much of it gelatinous albeit often colorful. Next
are desserts (many not packaged, like much of the food taken with the hands –
be still my germ phobia, be still!) beverages and finally fresh fruit.
I use my favorite Thai phrase
(“mong sa we lot” – vegetarian) and point at things. Those around me come to my
assistance. It’s very sweet really. I’m the only one who seems to not eat meat.
One day about halfway through the line the Mae Chee next to me turned around
and handed me a PILE of things; plastic mystery bags, unwrapped desserts and
some fruit. Other days the Mae Chee or Upasika point out what would be good for
me to take (little purple flowers today and some pickled green vegetable).
The first day Ayya brought some
food back for me so she could show me some good things to take in the future. My
response most of the time to what I eat is “tastes kind of weird but it’s ok”.
After the meal there a few more
hours of free time, spent taking a nap or sweeping all around the kuti or
blogging and having what I’ve come to call “a mystery picnic” with Ayya. She
always eats a bit more before noon, I always eat a bit more during the day too
but sometimes later in the afternoon instead.
At 2:00 I go to work in the
kitchen, a story for another blog. Suffice to say kitchen prep is kitchen prep no
matter where you are; although the peelers are different and hard to use, I
don’t recognize many of the vegetables, I can’t speak to the other women and
the cooking is done over open pits of flaming charcoal.
6:00 pm it’s time for evening
puja, again I sit appropriately for 1 ½ hours doing my “sound meditation” and
formal meditation and then it’s time for sleep.
Every day is the same. Days of
the week have no meaning here. Events of the world have no meaning here. Only
the phases of the moon have significance because Uposatha (a Buddhist day of observance when monastics
confess, recite the monastic code together and everyone sits all night – or as
much as they can) is always on the full moon.
On the one hand life is very
peaceful here and I think there is potential for very powerful practice. All is
just here, just now, just this. No tomorrow, no yesterday, nothing outside
these walls.
On the other hand I sense that
some of the Mae Chee are here because there is simply no place else for them to
go. And I see the systemic oppression they face from the patriarchy (see my
next blog entry).
I wish I had had the language
capability to have spoken to some of them at length about their lives here, about
their attitudes; but I am only able to see the surface and perhaps an
occasional glimpse at what’s just below.
I don’t know what the general feeling is about
their lives here. I know I am very grateful to have had the opportunity to bear
witness to this life and more grateful still for the freedom and vibrancy that
is my life.
1 comment:
Hi Geri,
This is so fascinating, thank you for sharing! And you do look beautiful in that black skirt - I absolutely love the photo.
Lots of love,
Claudia
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