Friday, January 24, 2014

Last fall I started taking chinese ink painting classes. The teacher is a local artist who teaches painting and chinese calligraphy to quite a few students at our school. I started on a bit of a lark with zero art experience beyond childhood crayon drawings but ended up loving it! I wrote a little about it last year.

When I first came here, I knew almost nothing about daoism (taoism...whatever) and honestly it wasn't what interested me the most. I love kung fu and the physical side of things is what appealed. Over the years however, things have changed. I still love to practice kung fu, tai ji, etc but now I also love learning about daoist philosophy, chanting the daoist chants, and.....painting. It may seem strange but Chinese culture is all kind of mixed up together so that daoism influences music, which influences tea culture, which influences chinese medicine, which influences buddhism, and so on and so on forever. It makes attempting to learn more about this stuff both challenging and so very interesting. Anyway, I really feel like my painting teacher (who lived in a daoist temple when he was younger) helps me to take a love and reverence for nature and put it to paper. Somehow, painting a tree, or some mountains, I really feel a connection with nature that seems extraordinary. It's changed the way I interact with my environment. I don't mean to belittle the education I've received here, but these handful of painting classes have helped me to understand daoism more than any lecture that Shifu has given or any well-written book I've read. I don't know why, I can barely even start to explain how it feels, but I'm so very glad I decided to give painting a try.

Thursday, January 16, 2014

All I can say about this week is that I will never again take indoor heating for granted.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

The first week back is done. It rained a little but for the rest of the time it's been sunny and not super cold.

The first few days of training were brutal! I forget how hard we work most of the time. After your body adapts to the routine, it starts to feel pretty easy, relatively speaking, and you forget that it actually takes a lot of strength, stamina, etc to get through an average day here. Well after 2 months off, I've been unpleasantly reminded. By the 4th day or so though, it's already started to get better and I feel less like a clumsy elephant.

There are a few things that I really missed, noodle soup for breakfast, how peaceful the temple can be on a weekday morning (when there aren't hundreds of tourists), and how my body feels when I'm always moving it. There are lots of things that I can't stand though, but now I can count down, only 8 months....only 8 months....

Feels so good!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KW7XMWLnizw

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Well, we're back in China now.

It was an awesome break and I'm very ready to get started on these last 8 months and get it over with. As soon as I got back on Chinese soil, the allergies and congestion started. Today I've been sneezing pretty much non-stop and runny nose and eyes on top of that. The air here just really gets to me. I never have any problems at home. So I'm looking forward to not having to deal with that, as well as any number of other things. So, though I'm glad to get back into the routine, I'm just looking ahead to the end.

We start training tomorrow so I should have some more interesting things to say next week.