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Let it Be

2023.06.26
Photo Credit: John Hain @ Pixabay

Every evening at 17:45, the temple bell rings at centuries old Daitokuji Temple near my house. When I take a walk, I listen to the great bell and feel a sense of inner peace. As the bell rings and vibrates like a rising and falling ocean wave, I cannot help but soften my cadence. In my steps, I find myself meditating almost like the monk in a blue robe who I met one day in front of a Kyoto Tofu store. 

It was a rainy afternoon. I went for my usual walk and got caught in the passing drizzle. I did not have an umbrella. I hastened my steps and with a crinkly nose and uplifted tense shoulders, I was almost in a small jog. I hated getting wet and I irritably looked ahead as my hair slowly plastered onto my forehead. In front of me I saw a figure. A straight back. Shoulders wide. Long legs stretching out of a blue robe of linen. Bare feet wearing zori Japanese sandals. The monks head was clean shaven. Disregarding the sudden drizzle, he walked ahead as if there was no hurry or rush, never changing his steps to the happening of the moment – a drizzle slowly turning into a generous pour. He was carrying a blue shopping bag made out of the same material as his dress. He stooped low and entered the Tofu store. “Momen icho onegaishimasu,” said the monk in a calm tone. Rain water was dripping from his shaved head, his robe heavily clung onto his body. “Hai yo.” The elderly tofu-maker responded. Exchanging money for product, the monk gently put the tofu into his blue bag and walked on. I raced quickly to be at his side. 

Surprisingly the monk was a Westerner from Iowa. He had been living in Japan for more than 10 years and was training at Daitokuji temple. “How can you walk so calmly, never changing your cadence in the rain?” I asked as I peered sideways as the rain was rolling into my eyes and fogging my glasses. “Let the rain do its thing.” The monk asked where I was from and what I was doing in Kyoto. As we continued our small-talk, getting to know more of each other, the rain turned into a slow drizzle once again. We parted ways, he, back to his temple and I on to my house. “Let the rain do its thing…” “Let it…” I thought to myself  “What a funny answer this was…”. When I got home, I dried myself off and quickly filled my bathtub with hot water. I gladly peeled off my wet clothes and welcomed the warm soothing water. I worked up the shampoo bubbles into my scalp. The unpleasant unexpected rain, the comforting soothing water, and the fresh lemony scent of my surroundings. “Let it…” I smiled.

Questions:

1) Who did the main character meet and how? 
2) Where did the monk come from? 
3) What did the monk mean by "Let the rain do its thing"? 
4) Why did the main character smile?


Scroll down ↓ for the answers













Answers:

1. The main character met a monk in the rain.
2. The monk came from Iowa in the United States of America.
3. There is a reason for everything.
4. The rain did its thing and made the main character enjoy the comfort of a bath.

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