Tuesday, 17 April 2007

Regeneration

Perhaps the monastery has a life of its own. If so, then now is the dawn of a dark night – what was disembowelled, empty, abandoned, grieving the loss of caretaker and winter guardian, can now barely contain its own renewal. Everywhere are signs of Spring and Easter, the New Years of Thailand, Sri Lanka, Burma, and Her Majesties Revenue. As if in welcome to the returning community the place is fringed with the whites of hyacinth and tulip, flowering clematis and a chandelier of the purest cherry blossom. A few walls beyond, the grass of the walking garden (threatened on the one hand by the freshly strimmed, strimming, Anagarika Chris and on the other by a Royal and Ancient greenkeeper) shows no sign of relenting. And for those of us at the front of the house, waking up is waking up into morning light and bird song from beneath the eaves.

It also means waking up to a toilet glad to receive you: for after a six week transplant operation the new bowels of the monastery are beginning to move – at the weekend the sewage system was commissioned for use following years of work and planning, a good deal of money and a massive investment of time, energy and expertise on the part of a few close friends of the monastery. Work however continues. Probably it will be a couple of weeks before the retreat house toilets are connected. More digging is about to begin behind the Dhamma Hall. Parking will remain problematic for a while longer.

But the news from the kitchen? Well, with the drains connected we’re no longer shipping buckets of water from room to room or tumbling it over the back wall. The dreaded washing-up rota is resurgent. Many hands are making light work of the spring clean and unearthing the odd foosty fruit that got away last year. The kitchen manager returned from his work-related Italian study-tour singing the praises of cheap and abundant fennel, all the while brandishing a shiny silicon spoon, donated as a hint about the state of the wooden ones he’s won in the past. And yesterday Abramina celebrated her 21st birthday with a Dana offering – oh the sweet spring promises of youth! Perhaps your heart too is young, open, generous and clamouring for a Dana list. I hear it is so. Therefore, in response to requests from supporters, here’s what the spring clean revealed would be helpful:

  • soft fruit
  • honey
  • long-life milk
  • small bread baskets
  • coarse metal pan scourers (without sponge)

Away from the kitchen the following would also prove useful:

  • fire wood
  • large letter stamps (1st or 2nd class)
  • superglue

Thank you but we have plenty of lentils, spices, toothbrushes, instant coffee, pasta, towels and apples.