Tuesday, December 25, 2007
Moment of Zen in Japan
5 years later, I was in Japan for 3 weeks on official business. I took the trains back and forth to work from my hotel, to a small city outside Tokyo. One late night, as I was coming back from work, I looked out the window to see another train pause by my train for those precise 30 seconds that trains stop in Japan. Like a bizarre modern adaptation of that painting, the image jumped out at me. There were people standing, looking out blankly into space, or reading a book or sitting while lost in thoughts. Bills to pay, health problems, or that perfume in the store they just saw. The image hung in front of me as I took it all in. Then as the chance moment passed, the image disappearing in a blur of light and sound.
Civilizations change, the lone spirit still lingers in those private moments. That was my moment in Zen.
Monday, December 10, 2007
The Value of Take-out food
I would give the order to the manager of the restaurant, and wait around watching the patrons eating there. There were 4 wooden tables in all. The place was always crowded with construction laborers, bus drivers from the nearby bus station, and workers from the nearby factory. There was a 60-watt bulb illuminating the entire place which was on, no matter what time of the day it was. People liked to light up cigarettes, after a good meal. The stink of the smoke from the cigarettes and beedis (dried tobacco leaves rolled up into thin cylinders- an absolutely lethal mini-cigarette) mixed with the smoke from firewood emanating from the kitchen. There was a distinct smell to this concoction that I still go back to during barbecues half a world away. The walls of the kitchen and the one-room eating area were covered with a patina of soot. I awaited my take-out meal with an anticipation that only 12-year olds are capable of.
The best part was the packaging of "take-out food" in 1980 in rural
(tomato and coconut) were also wrapped in leaves individually and tied together with a jute thread. These 2 packages were again wrapped into recycled newspaper. The A shiver of anticipation would run down my spine, when I touched the warm food packets and put them into the wire basket that my mom had knit. Then I would race back home, narrowly missing the stray dog crossing the road just at that moment. When I got home, the four of us would sit down on the living room floor of our 1-bedroom apartment and open the packages. The aroma of the food would practically lift me and my sister a few inches off the floor. The food disappeared faster than the time it took to make it! Then we would roll the packaging materials into a bundle and toss them into the garbage bin outside the house. As the minutes went by, a cow would walk up to the bin and find the bundle. Within minutes, the bundle disappeared- paper, thread, banana leaf and all. In an hour, any record of our take-out food saga would end up in a cow-pie on the melting tar road in the summer sun.