The canons of
chanoyu, developed more than Responsibilities of
the host involve a carefully
four
centuries ago, prescribe a very formal and
elaborate etiquette to
be observed by all
participants in the tea
ceremony.
studied sequence of gestures and actions,
designed to achieve
the greatest economy
of meaningful movements.
True to its Zen
Buddhist roots, the ritual of tea emphasizes
the elimination of the unnecessary.
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Chanoyu affords the opportunity to practice
and cultivate those high ideals of the human
experience. In short,
chanoyu is more about
individual character and human relationships
than it is about tea.
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To
pause from the cares outside and seek Sensing
and appreciating the harmony
to achieve a sense of
alert calm within the
walls of the tea room, listening to
the sound
of boiling water soon to be combined with
powdered tea, taking pleasure in flowers
simply yet elegantly arranged, following
the brush strokes of a haiku
painted on
the hanging scroll, hearing the footfalls
of the
host about to enter the room and
yet aware of rustling leaves
outside,
make chanoyu more than merely
another cup of tea.
of sight, smell and sound elevate
this
occasion beyond the ordinary.
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To
strive for and to appreciate the harmony,
It is through the Way of Tea then that one
respect, purity and tranquility of this single
occasion that brings people together to
share tea is a microcosm of
all human
experiences and the
combination of
sight, sound, smell and taste
will never be
reproduced
in this exact way again.
recognizes every human encounter
is a
unique and singular occasion which will
never
recur again exactly. We pass this
way but once or as the
Japanese say,
"ichigo, ichi," one cup, one moment!