Thursday, November 27, 2014

Sweet, Salty, Sour, Bitter, and Pungent Flavors of Life: A Zen Thanksgiving in the Garden of Eden



Delicate crunching sounds of the apple mingle with the texture of its tart taste against her palate. The magic tree bursts with joy as it sees the fruit’s delicious red roundness disappear with the first bite.  Strangely it created an image of the bitten apple that people in the future will connect with their machines rather than with the very elixir of life.  The desire to share the fruit’s sweetness with her companion arose in Hawwa according to this version of humankind’s many origin myths.

As Aadam took the next bite, their journey of awakening to the multiple flavors of life began.  The tale has been interpreted many times over with mostly negative inflection, blaming Eve/woman for the troubles in the world.  On the eve of this Thanksgiving as the evergreens in our backyard bow down with their snowy burden, I ponder the meaning of Hawwa, Eve’s other name in Hebrew that means the source of life. Thinking of her, whose origin may lie in the ancient near eastern goddesses, as Annapurna (a food bestowing Hindu goddess), I imagine a Zen Thanksgiving in the Garden of Eden.

This year as the prophecy of a heavy snow storm took over their minds, people in the east coast began their travels early and rushed to gather all the ingredients for ritual consumption of excess.  The American Rite of Thanksgiving is a yearly reminder of their blessed entry into a new Eden after their expulsion from their European homeland.   Since the first European emissary mistook this land for an eastern paradise calling the natives Indians, I claim my right to infuse Zen into the mix of recipes people will consume this season.  The natives inhabiting this land, who came from Asia millennia before, joyfully shared their food, according to the American myth, with the new arrivals. The encounter did not end well.    

Well, human history is as bitter sweet as our food. It is funny that one meaning of the word Adam connects him to the color red! In a version of the tale the Prophet of Islam explained the nature of the clay used to create the first humans thus: “The dust resembles him most because it is white, red, green, pink and blue. It has sweet, sour tastes, agreeable and disagreeable temperaments, hard and soft qualities of mind. This has caused the people to be soft and hard, red, black, yellow, pink based on different types of soil.” So we are many colored clay according to this tale; we are made of food according to the Upanishads where anna (food) itself is Brahman or ultimate reality. If we traverse to China and mix India’s Buddha with China’s Laotzu, we enter the Zen Kitchen to savor our collective feast of gratitude. 

                             
The cover of the latest National Geographic is adorned with an apple, and the issue is dedicated to the joy of food that brings family and friends together.  We learn that “From Qesem Cave near Tel Aviv comes evidence of ancient meals prepared at a 300,000-year old hearth, the oldest ever found, where diners gathered to eat together.” The magazine article reminds us that “’To break bread together’, a phrase as old as the Bible, captures the power of a meal to forge relationships, bury anger, provoke laughter.”  The ritual of Thanksgiving repeats that ancient relationship, but in our daily life many of us have lost our joyful connection with food.

                                                                      
In today’s mechanized age in a strange twist of fate, people in the richer suburbs of the earth gobble down their fast food, heat up frozen entrees, and consume canned goop. In their benighted capitalist mindset they also think of paying women for their “job” in the kitchen. In most ancient cultures food preparation and partaking has been a sacred activity.  It is strange that even in India where Shiva as a beggar stands in front of Annapurna for the benediction of food, people are now falling over each other to imitate such weird ideas.  In this new century, when women scramble to keep the rhythm of their lives together with demanding external jobs, many still see their food bestowing role as a privilege. However, that does not mean that women are born with a cooking gene, or they all belong barefoot in the kitchen.


Feeding is not economic consumption but a life sustaining activity and although there are celebrated chefs who are men, women who feed their babies with their bodies can associate life, body, and food with a sacred materiality.  Ishigaki Rin, a Japanese poet, writes in a poem called “The Pan, the Pot, the Fire I Have Before Me” that “cooking was mysteriously assigned to women, as a role, but I don’t think that was unfortunate” and her speaker wants to “study government, economy, literature as sincerely as we cook potatoes and meat.” It is difficult to do that for either women or men if they are all running helter skelter to make more and more money to obtain the latest gadget when Black Friday rings in, abbreviating their giving of thanks.

Although cooking for the family is not a role assigned to men, women find their men who cook quite irresistible.  In a remarkable film called Eat Drink Man Woman Ang Lee, the director from Taiwan, creates a sumptuous visual metaphor for the pleasures of life that are delicate, plentiful, deeply nourishing and profoundly satisfying if one knows the secret of the flavors of life.  In this earthly paradise, human beings have been gifted with the most gorgeous fruits- plum, sweet and sometimes bitter but unfortunately often we fail to taste them because we mix up the real with the mental. 


It must be my recent return from the American Academy of Religion conference whose book exhibit was overflowing with thousands of books on the Bible that made me want to read the Hebrew tale from an eastern perspective. While the Tree of Life coexists with the Tree of Knowledge, life sometimes frightens man because his mind reminds him that the apple’s crunchy sweetness is momentary and transient; soon his palate will return to dust so he imagines a permanent heaven in the future.  In the process he forgets that he actually resides in paradise, now.  Since no two monotheists agree on what their tales mean, glancing from the Coptic, to Orthodox, to Gnostic readings of the story of a Jewish man named Jesus, this desi woman can surmise that he had woken up from his slumber and wanted others to awaken to the knowledge that the kingdom of heaven is within us.

As I walked through the book publishers’ aisles, I noticed more faces of the Buddha peer from the covers of newly minted Tibetan and other Buddhist Studies texts and found enough splattering of Vedas, Upanishads and Daodejing to remind the unwary alien wanderer that humankind has produced other books too.  Buddha and Laotzu who ignore the concepts of creator gods teach us to wake up to the beauty of the moment where eternal life resides. They would say to Hawwa and Aadam that each has to eat the apple and take the journey into their own depth consciousness to recognize that Eden is just each person’s awakening to life’s magic. Buddha nature is our birthright; it makes us aware of the texture of life in its splendor once the illusion of a separate self falls off the shelf.

In the Zen Kitchen to Enlightenment, Master Dogen exhorts the disciple, “When washing the rice, remove any sand you find.  In doing so, do not lose even one grain of rice.  When you look at the rice see the sand at the same time; when you look at the sand, see also the rice. Examine both carefully.  Then, a meal containing the six flavors and three qualities will come together naturally.” Then he says, “Handle even a single leaf of a green in such a way that it manifests the body of the Buddha.  This in turn allows the Buddha to manifest through the leaf.”

                                              
Meditating on food while handling a salad leaf, let’s now add the taste of mango chutney to our palate and paint this writing palette with the colors of India.  Mango is mana, a divine fruit of the most sensuous kind.  Its intoxicating fragrance is meant to invoke the desire to live and taste its most maddening flavors. While food is Brahman, Isha Upanishad says it must be shared and eaten with detachment: Tyakten bhunjhitha.  Taittiriya Upanishad speaks of eating together in another mantra.

Today our appetitive desires have left all boundaries, and strange notions of hunger games have distorted our original relationship with hunger. The psycho-spiritual effects of abstract notions that see life as punishment and our material existence as sinful can be far reaching. India too suffers from such abstractions. A film called Compulsion with Heather Graham hints at pathologies around excesses. In India the Great Goddess herself is the indwelling hunger and she is its satiety.  One must be a beggar Shiva with an empty bowl stretched in front of the abundant goddess Annapurna who fills it with the most delicious delicacies. Shiva’s hunger sated, he returns to his meditation.
 
Abundance of the American Thanksgiving is a gift indeed but so many political calls to change food labels and portion control mechanisms speak of an epidemic. Alan Watts, the western world’s Zen master extraordinaire, describes our “abominable kitchens” that are “not the result of poverty.” He writes in an essay called “Murder in the Kitchen” collected in a remarkable book Does It Matter: Essays on Man’s Relationship to Materiality that these kitchens “reflect the fact that the richest and most powerful civilization on earth is so preoccupied with saving time and making money that it has neither taste for life nor capacity for pleasure.” That is a true fall from grace.

Although I have been fortunate enough to eat the most marvelous food in many corners of the world, I often recall the image of my grandmother with a Bengali knife (bonti) sitting in the courtyard.  She took her utmost time to cut lau or lauki (a kind of squash) in the finest pieces possible for a favorite recipe of mine.  She would also cut its green peel in thin bits so that the entire vegetable can be eaten in its delicate finery.  She also taught me my first rituals that sustain me even today. She must have known the mystery of our interiority, the female knowledge of life.  Remembering her, I pray may we this Thanksgiving, become aware of the gift of life, breath, and food and truly relish a gathering of family and friends.