Showing posts with label Taoism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taoism. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Tea culture appreciation versus appropriation

 

I just caught an earlier discussion between So Han Fan and Riu Liu on this subject, which was quite interesting.  It wasn't what I expected; much more developed and refined, and very insightful, just great really.  One would expect this kind of discussion to never move far off saying that white people new to tea aren't well-trained enough or "Chinese enough" to have a developed opinion worth listening to about Chinese cultural aspects, and that was part of it, but it kept going from there, uncovering layers of how all that really maps out.

I won't be able to summarize everything they said; it covered too much ground.  People should watch that instead of reading this, if it came down to choosing; just put it on 1.25 speed if nearly two hours seems like too much, and listen to it while you're doing something else.  

As far as further commentary here goes let's take it bit by bit, point by point, without ever trying to tackle the grand scope in one go.


white people new to tea aren't well enough informed or Chinese enough to have a developed opinion worth listening to:  this was never expressed or addressed directly, at least in clear detail related to fully unpacking this, but it definitely was a sub-theme that factored in early on.  Both speakers, So Han and Riu, touched on examples of how this really did manifest in real life problems they've experienced personally, and that worked, probably better than a regressive development of ideas, exploring layer after layer of context and assumptions.  

In some of those cases people really did cross over from appreciating Chinese culture (positively engaging with it), exploring it, into taking it on as their own, and using it for personal gain and profit, while promoting overly summarized and partly incorrect ideas.  Without clear examples the nuances of what really happened wouldn't have shown through, and how complex inputs come together.

To back up quite a bit, this already assumes that there is a traditional, unified, accepted, authority based, accurate version of traditional Chinese culture, or strands of that, sets of ideas and practices.  Does this work?  Yes and no, probably.  But then it would really take the nearly two hours to develop only this point.  It's something I've been considering a lot for many years, in the most recent form repeatedly discussing this with a friend who is exploring Chinese tea culture as a research anthropologist, in China, Taiwan, and the US, with only early research and summary academic publication related to China completed.  That anthropologist friend looks for "schools," training organizations, or "masters," and for looking for that kind of thing he is able to find it. So Han and Riu both explicitly covered how it doesn't occur in the form one might expect, as a Westerner, related to exactly that context, which I'll get back to.  

So where does this leave us, setting this aside, if we can't fully unpack this dimension?  It's a little awkward, because it's not clear how we can specify the contrast with a Chinese person who is a part of an original culture, who can speak for that perspective, without clarifying to what extent a unified historical culture even exists.  


Different levels and factors enter in, related to the second part about someone being a suitable representative, brought up by both speakers:  someone being racially Chinese, part of a Chinese culture (foreign or in China, which is different), speaking Chinese languages, exposed to a strand of the tradition ("study under a master" and such), with background engaging with tea producers, vending experience (both a pro and a con, as I see it), and so on.  

Indirectly So Han ends up justifying his position as "Chinese enough" based on family history, race related genetics, language proficiency, visits to China, and contact with producers.  That's Chinese enough, probably, but someone else could try to move the goalposts and demand exposure to some other background or training of some sort, or claim that the sourcing exposure was actually very limited.  Let's set that aside.


tea producers as a reference:  one of So Han's examples is clear and easy to consider, about producers identifying types of tea, with this serving as a more distinct and accurate identifier of type than Western oriented categories.  This gets a little odd; he was saying that a partially oxidized green tea was identified as a green tea by the producer, so it is that, even if Westerners see it as some sort of exception, or not in that category.  It's hard to say if that authority justification would work in every case, but there's something to it.  Then Riu started in on saying that organization of categories and use of concepts might be slightly different within different cultures, which they both developed further, and I'd like to add more on here.

A friend who produces oolong in China once almost apologetically offered that they don't really use the category of oolong (/ wulong) there, and just call tea versions by the name of what they are, per individual plant type input.  The same kind of divide has came up related to saying whether sheng pu'er is a version of hei cha.  A driver for it needing to either be that, or to not be, relates to the familiar initiative for Westerners to put every tea into one of a limited set of main categories (green, black (/ red), oolong, white, hei cha, yellow).  

Per seemingly good input from people familiar with local Chinese perspective sheng pu'er is just sheng pu'er, and hei cha is something else, and they don't need to force that complete division into main groups to work out.  Surely some people in China would want the groups to stick, and they would have their own opinion, but in general it may well just not be a typical Chinese project.  Other examples So Han and Riu covered reinforced that.


Buddhists and Taoists have lineages, but not tea cultures:  a great point by So Han.  I'm not sure this is right, since the "master" and "schools" themes come up in China and Taiwan too, but I agree with and love the point he's making, that tea culture is a living, diverse, locally oriented theme in China instead, not at all unified and codified as religions are.  This single point I keep returning to in discussion with that anthropologist friend, how it may not be valid for some people in China to try to fix, package, and essentially sell one version of Chinese tea culture, regardless of what credentials they can collect together or justify.  Riu mentioned her own experience studying under a "master" (I don't love that term, but it must apply in some cases).  I can't do justice to summarizing that, and would make it less accurate by trying to, so people should check it out there instead (around 53:30, with So Han introducing the set of ideas there first).

To be clear I'm not the right person to try and place those claims of people being masters, with lineages, tied to training classes and certifications, etc., in both China and Taiwan.  Even relatively unified or standard approaches to ceremonial Gong Fu Cha brewing I'm just not familiar with.  Oddly a main stepping stone in exploring tea was a ceremonial brewing demonstration, held at a Huawei product display site on a visit to Shenzhen a decade ago for an IT project, so it's not as if I've never seen any versions of it.




Was that an example of cultural exploitation on their part?  I don't see it that way, but an argument could be made for that, depending on what was presented there, and how it was framed.


how does all this relate to Buddhism scope?:  it's a bit of a tangent but I did study Buddhism for quite awhile, on my own and in academic scope, and was ordained as a Thai Buddhist monk at one point (only for a bit over two months, which is normal in their tradition), and have lived in a Thai Buddhist family for the last 15 years.  So how do these parallel themes overlap or differ; would it be ok for a Westerner to have the same kind of exposure that I've had, or a few years' worth instead of 30, and to position themselves as some sort of teacher, or cultural authority?  Of course not.  Even if a respected member of that tradition officially sanctioned it that would still seem sketchy, especially if it was for-profit.

To be clear it's fine to comment on Buddhist themes in online discussions, for anyone, even with very limited exposure.  There's no reason why someone couldn't answer Quora questions, comment on Buddhism group threads, write a blog, or post videos to Youtube.  It would be best if they clarified their level and type of exposure, but that's up to them.  Selling anything drawing on their own authority in relation to Buddhism, or promoting themselves as a teacher or representative, even without a commercial angle, would be a step too far.  Wearing robes and such would be context dependent, if that would make sense or not, but in general a little would go a long way in terms of adding on such trappings.  It would be as well to not do that, but of course anyone can if they want to.

It's not as if there is a fixed timing or exposure level after which changing a role would make sense, but anyone participating for a few years in such a tradition and then making it their own, taking on the role of teacher and passing on adjusted ideas, would seem to be acting in bad faith, or at least poor judgement.  Tea vendors just selling tea don't parallel this context concern at all, but a little goes a long way related to re-packaging Gong Fu ceremonial or aesthetic practices.  If that kind of thing is offered as something they've taken up as a derived and adjusted individual practice, versus a direct continuation of an older tradition, that changes things a little.  Training certificates make for a strange scope; I'll stop short of getting into that part.


why do Westerners need to apply the Chinese cultural context framework?:  this is more a tangent here than coverage or response to what they said, my thoughts on how this tends to go.  It seems like people don't need for their tea experience to follow a traditional Chinese form, right, they could just drink tea?  A couple of natural exceptions to that come to mind.

Plenty of Western tea enthusiasts love both the experience of drinking tea, the taste, getting brewing right, learning types, etc., and also the formal, ceremonial, and aesthetic forms and aspects.  I don't see anything wrong with that.  Collecting teaware is fine, or setting up a room in a Chinese decoration theme, adopting a formal way of brewing drawn from some external source, even going further and investigating Taoism, and so on.  Once someone starts wearing traditional Chinese clothing it all gets a little strange, because why, and what imagery is being borrowed?  Then it's hard to say where a natural dividing line should occur.  It's subjective.  


my friend Huyen's family appreciates traditional aesthetic range without making it strange



at least the goggles go a step beyond more original scope (credit Wikipedia Gong Fu cha page)


Still I have no problem with that, people adopting and adjusting foreign cultural traditions, but what if the person taking this up is a tea vendor?  Now we're on to that all being a marketing angle, which somehow seems worse.  

Two lines of concerns come up:  is that even ok for someone with limited exposure to these themes, and how would there ever be a line drawn as to when it's ok?  What if So Han was American born Chinese but he didn't speak the language, and hadn't visited China, and learned from text sources and discussions instead?  It's hard to say how that would be different.  Someone could visit China dozens of times and still not have relevant additional cultural input, even though that would tend to come up if they were interested.  Lots of people visit China once or twice and take up a mantle of being an expert, and I've been to China three times, and Hong Kong and Taiwan as many more, and I had limited exposure to tea themes.  Visiting producers changes things, but only a little.  Short visits are tourism, even if someone brings back some tea they bought from a producer.

It's hard to place how it would all be different if So Han was white, if his genetics were different.  Is it really more "his" for being Chinese?  In one sense yes, but in another maybe not.  If he grew up as a third generation Chinese American with almost no contact with that aspect of Chinese culture it would only be "his" in a very limited sense.  If someone else, who is white, somehow entered into close contact with a Chinese family or local culture over an extended time, along with a tea tradition, the genetics would seem to drop out as a most relevant factor.


A European tea vendor friend commented that he is in the no-win situation of cultural borrowing being expected of him, that if he hosts tastings with absolutely no reference to Gong Fu cha background it would be seen as problematic, as not fulfilling expectations.  Then no matter what he learns and incorporates of course it can't apply as a universal, valid, appropriate inclusion from Chinese culture, which is a very diverse thing on its own.  So what should he do?  Probably intention and framing is important, to address why he is including some components, what background he is drawing on, and what kinds of claims he isn't trying to make.  Then of course you can't add a disclaimer to every sentence; that kind of thing could only be an early framing point.


Finer points made in examples in the video:  I think this is worth touching on a little, especially since that Reddit discussion went there, without the clear benefit of someone having an informed perspective to review these points made.  Let's examine some:


American tea enthusiasts rejecting that shai hong is red (black) tea (a sun-dried variation of Dian Hong, Yunnan black tea):  that's crazy; what else would it be?


questioning if green tea can be partially oxidized:  this breaks down to how people use categories, and the Western project of making things fit in boxes doesn't map back to China (as So Han explained).  For the most part I think if a producer says a tea is green tea then it is, with that broad scope potentially varying more than one might expect.  That's a problem with awareness and perspective related to the negative judgment, but to a limited extent people are also just talking past each other.  There are many kinds of green tea made in China, in lots of regions, and it's quite reasonable that some of that scope is unfamiliar.  

This comes up a lot with sheng (pu'er-like tea) made in Southeast Asian countries either being oxidized a bit much (from a long wither, maybe?), heated too hot, so taking on some green tea characteristics, or seeming unfinished by not being heated enough, taking on an in-between-white character.  To me it's still sheng, but a stylistic variation, with aging potential likely impacted, more than there's a concern over any naming or type convention.  Call it whatever you want; that doesn't change what it is.


is yellow tea fermented or oxidized?:  I don't know, really, maybe both.  The person making the comment, interrupting a presentation with a correction, was clearly wrong on that level, so we could almost just stop there.  If a green tea stored wet and warm transitioned based on a chemical reaction involving enzymes and an input from oxygen then it oxidized; if bacteria or fungus was involved it fermented (as we commonly used the term; really food science uses two other terms for both these things), and it could be both.  

There was a time when an oxidation process was often translated as fermentation instead, and it could less than perfectly clear what role bacteria and fungus are playing in some processing.  But again it sort of doesn't matter, and communicating respectfully is more important than taking better and better guesses about such things.


claiming a lot of Chinese tea is at high risk of being contaminated:  I think So Han's explanation of why the context and framing of that perspective is absurd is worth considering.  Again that's the main point, the form and tone of exchanges, but this kind of claim or belief comes up over and over.  I've heard vendors based in China say the same thing (one Chinese and one European, that come to mind).  Was that because of awareness of real risks, due more to personal bias, or just marketing?  

Here in Thailand my wife buys into this bias a lot more than I do because of isolated cases, like people in China once putting melamine (plastic powder) in powdered milk, to increase protein test level results.  The way that played out in the example So Han shared was clearly way out of line, but it's not really only racism that fuels that concern, even though it is mostly that.  

On my first visit to China our local guide went on and on about how many foods are at risk of such problems, and he explained that a whole egg can be "faked," re-created from other ingredients.  I'm not so sure about that, but it's an interesting thought.  The tricky part about interpreting such comments is that it can become a joke to Chinese people to play up the absurdity of the more extreme rumors, so all that part could've definitely been a put-on.  Or urban rumors and myths enter in.  Then people drinking powdered plastic in powdered milk was real, and not necessarily only isolated instances, so the worst cases are definitely bad enough.


what about appropriation being an example of appreciation?:  this seemed to be covered from lots of different angles in the video, on different levels.  People taking up foreign culture based practices are fine, but communicating their own expertise and authority, and utilizing these for their own personal gain, is all typically a step too far.  Even if a good review and sorting process could extract a dozen or two individual aspects of the broad Chinese tea cultural landscape patching those together to serve as a functional "school" of sorts doesn't really work.

Setting aside vendors taking things a bit far atypical personal practices can seem a bit absurd, viewed in one way.  Lots of people wear natural fiber robes to drink tea out of beautiful hand-made teaware.  Per one take this is functionally ceremonial (it supports relaxation and meditation functions), and also aesthetically pleasing, or it could just seem odd to someone else, or related to a subculture that might be overly dependent on borrowing aspects from other cultures.


a NY Times article sums up a take on an LA subculture (photo credit and article)



a finer point about prior context of discrimination mattering:  So Han raised a good point about how all these ideas don't necessarily stand alone as a guide to what works and what doesn't related to borrowing from other cultures, because the context of how different cultures interact in the present matters.  If there was no racism against Asians, or negative stereotypes at play to work around, different forms of uptake could be regarded as more reasonable, because the broader context would be simpler, and less problematic.  On the negative side Chinese people can be regarded as potentially deceptive, an unfair stereotype since anyone can be like that, and I don't see that as necessarily being a broad cultural condition (even though my wife does tend to claim that "Indians are tricky," even after we've been mutual friends with several Indians, and I count even more as friends).  

This can be a little harder to place than it might seem at first.  Black people in the US experienced a fairly consistent and broad form of racism in the US in the 1950s and 60s, which unfortunately isn't completely resolved today, but discrimination against Asians in the US never took as consistent a form.  There are negative aspects to common Asian stereotypes, and the ongoing culture war surely has made racism worse instead of better, relating to plenty of examples of incidents, but it all varies a lot, and keeps changing.


what about Chinese people exploiting Chinese culture?:  tied to another less than fair or ideal stereotyping anyone with a certain nationality or "race's" genetics can also be granted freer reign to speak for broad traditions that they may or may not have a lot of exposure to, or the right type and degree of background.

In one of my first exposures to differing tea types a local Chinese-Thai woman was selling sheng pu'er.  Looking back what she communicated about tea was quite limited, over the course of a number of visits (her shop was close to where I worked), a bit odd given how that would've factored into selling it.  Per what she shared it seemed like either her father or uncle was into tea, and it wasn't clear that she had learned much about the subject from them.  About 10 years ago I bought a cake of modestly priced "young" or new factory sheng at that shop to drink, to explore and acclimate to the type.  That purchase was based on a recommendation of a fellow visitor there instead of that shop owner, who made no recommendations, related to limiting discussion of any background.  It was probably roughly as poor a choice as I could've made, quite harsh without significant aging input.  Still, it worked out; I acclimated to bitterness, some, and went on to explore oolongs more, returning to sheng exposure and preference some years later, only after her shop had closed.

That shop owner was also selling Chinese artwork, in some seemingly traditional form, having people produce high volumes of quickly made versions using related site space as a studio.  Looked at one way both ventures represented exploiting a connection to "her" culture, two different subject themes which she may or may not have been an expert in, or even as knowledgeable as an average tea enthusiast or fan of art.  Or maybe that's a completely unfair and inaccurate take.  Thais don't put much thought into topics like cultural appropriation, or even racism for that matter, so it wouldn't have been discussed as being an example of that back then.  

Maybe this doesn't connect as well to this point for a second reason, because the stereotype image of Chinese people is completely different here in Thailand.  In one sense it's not negative at all, and in another it could be seen as such.  All that is complicated, and maybe a bit off the point, but somehow it seems relevant to clarify that there isn't the same sort of otherness or negative connotation here that Chinese people would experience in the US in most places.  A lot of people have Chinese ancestry, and people with Chinese family background tend to be among the most wealthy members of society.


That last part may muddy the waters a bit in relation to a strand of other related themes matching up better.  I suppose it works to be mindful that simple conclusions don't work well related to unpacking and understanding complex issues and perspectives.  That's why So Han and Riu offering their thoughts and examples worked so well, because they touched on broader scope issues, then brought up examples of personal experiences relating to those points, and clarified how they saw it all fitting together based on the benefit of hindsight and further consideration.


Monday, January 31, 2022

Meeting Paolo Panda, about tea and meditation




That meetup group recently met with someone who has been active in social media group discussion lately, Paolo Panda.  At first glance he is into aged sheng and tea ceremony as meditation themes, which really did work out as primary areas of interest through discussion.  We just didn't get far into details about aged sheng.

Jan joined, that contact (/ tea friend) living in the Netherlands, who I wrote about talking to here.  Huyen didn't make it; something came up.  As with most of these meetups there wasn't really any one clear theme or reason for meeting, just running through interesting ideas.

Paolo described the tea and meditation theme.  As background, he has personal history with the Global Tea Hut, probably the best known organization that promotes tea and religion or tea and Taoist practices themes.  He didn't say a lot about his experience with them, although we started in on that.  I guess they are into tea experience as meditation, with variations in brewing forms or natural experiences factoring in, but not really into linking that to religious ceremony or ideas, or more formal meditation.  He spoke positively of Wu De but not in so much detail.

Paolo's evolved ceremonial form largely involves having people join to drink aged sheng pu'er, selected in relation to what he expects them to like, and to typical effect from a certain tea (which would vary by person).  Then they drink tea without speaking, for an hour and a half.  He said that some people find that experience of tea in silence very moving, experiencing internal scope in a novel and unusually deep way.

In his website he talks about categorizing aged sheng, and about some relatively standard factors affecting how a tea comes across:  growing conditions, elevation, tea plant age, local source area, processing inputs, storage conditions, more natural grown or wild plant source material versus plantation grown tea, etc.  This site has more on the ceremony and meditation side.

Paolo is from Italy and now lives in England (Brighton), and has traveled a good bit, and has experienced quite a bit in relation to themes like tea and meditation.  The meditation and effect of aged sheng aspects just resonate with him; he doesn't seem the "spiritual seeker" type to the same extent one might expect from the rest.  He probably spends more time focused on inner reality and how he relates to external factors than most, but it came across as just being introspective, and open to atypical approaches.

To be clear I'm fairly open to a lot of that other Eastern culture range myself.  I practiced meditation in different forms at different stages of my life, and was ordained as a Buddhist monk at one point.  I don't think I would fit in at Burning Man, which Paolo mentioned attending, but then back in my 20s maybe more so.  Meditation seeming effective is familiar, just not that tea ceremony form.


Suzana's pictures are always better (credit to her)


We talked for awhile, about a broad range of things, but this is going to make it sound like we didn't.  Ralph, Jan, and Paolo talked about clay pots for awhile but I kind of tuned that out; I own a couple of those but don't even use them, since I'm familiar with gaiwans, and didn't make it through a full seasoning cycle.  In discussing aged sheng it helps to overlap quite a bit in relation what you are drinking with someone else, able to use familiar versions as discussion starting points.  I don't spend that much on tea, so the more interesting $1/gram and up range higher demand versions I tend to never try.  Ralph and Paolo might've put more effort into exploring that but didn't.  Jan is not new to sheng and aged sheng, and even sells sheng online in a small shop.

One interesting discussion point came up related to how people combine tea and meditation, or how they tend to borrow Eastern culture aspects.  Suzana mentioned that because meditation practice is so familiar and adjoined to yoga in India people wouldn't ordinarily connect it with tea experience.  There's a lot to that, and a deeper pattern that it informs.  Here in Thailand meditation is also familiar, tied more to religious practices, and internal self-development, and again it isn't regarded as connecting at all with tea experience.  


Keo!  he doesn't look like he's meditating in any pictures I have.


To move back to a broader level, it seems like "Western culture" individuals drawing on Eastern themes tend to see a broad range of ideas and subjects as connected, and import them as if they go together.  Tea, martial arts, meditation, religion, health themes, and even clothing styles can end up combined, when in the original traditions these are all separate subjects, that can have points of connection and significant overlap, but they rarely are tightly coupled, never mind embraced as a bundle.  Or at least that's my understanding.

We talked about how in modern Chinese culture people aren't even that into the same forms of these things.  Gong Fu tea practice isn't all that common, and not everyone drinks tea.  The people who do are far more likely to use very simple brewing approaches, like "grandpa style," brewing in a tea bottle.  We were close friends with three families from China through my kids' school friends, to the level that we did activities on weekends or visited each other's houses, and none of them were into tea in any way remotely like Western tea enthusiasts.  They could try to name a couple of local types they would regularly drink, and maybe not get far with that.  One friend from Japan drank tea but couldn't place any name, not even the category of sencha, just saying that he bought tea at a grocery store.

When I moved to Thailand to ordain as a monk something similar came up related to being disappointed with monks' takes on core Buddhist ideas:  they weren't really familiar with them.  The topics of rejection of a real self or the meaning of suffering as a fundamental condition of life experience they had heard of, but had no opinion on what those really meant.  Their approach was more towards being moral, going with the flow, staying relaxed.  And these were monks!  They said that forest monks do more with such theories, and related meditation practices.  I did study formal meditation (vipassana) at a local Bangkok temple meditation center, a main one too, Wat Mahadat, but even though the support was helpful the depth of practical advice and links to theory weren't what I expected.

I did want to touch on one theme that I noticed from that experience, which we discussed as a topic but that I didn't add in that conversation, about how sitting on a floor to meditate works out.  Many people notice that this makes them uncomfortable, and then it's often accepted that they could meditate sitting in a chair instead.  But there is a deeper function behind sitting meditation in relation to the physical posture playing a practical role, that links to internal perspective.  

We all carry stress in our bodies in relation to posture and tension; it's normal.  A practice like yoga helps regularly "clear" that, and a lot of kinds of exercises would minimize the impact or experience.  Something like sitting at a desk 8 hours a day would make it much worse, both the routine posture and degree of tension.  When you sit without support (the cross-legged theme) the lack of support and motion activates that tension as causing discomfort.  Mental experience and physical experience meet in this form, to a certain extent; as you relax and clear your mind the tension naturally reduces.  It's not about amount of time spent, and really also not about "not thinking," although thoughts racing and shallow chest breathing do adjoin the opposite experience, feeling tension and experiencing internal noise.  As you relax your mind and body together the physical tension can subside.

Anyway, we didn't really talk about that.  Per usual we did skim across introductions, with a bit on tea preferences and experiences, travel, and social media experiences.

It was great meeting Paolo and hearing his take on those themes.  I think the connection between tea and meditation is much more routinely embraced by Western Gong Fu Cha practitioners than I take up, but of course I see it as perfectly valid and functional.  It was interesting hearing about a developed perspective and approach to that.  The rest about tea exploration, varying cultures, and travel added up to more than I captured in this summary, but it didn't work to go back and add details to fill it in.  These written summaries need sets of connected ideas within main themes to sound more interesting, but organic discussion can be something else, about lots of diverse ideas.  

There is a more standard interview form discussion with Paolo that covered more background available through this link, conducted by Pascal Djpas of the My Tea Pal community.


Friday, September 17, 2021

Talking to Ken Cohen, host of the Talking Tea podcast





This is about talking to Ken Cohen in a meetup, not about being a guest on the Talking Tea podcast.  It was interesting hearing how hosting that goes, and other personal background stories and discussion.  There wasn't as much central theme as occurs with tea producers, or even vendors, when narrowing discussion scope down to a clearly defined range of tea types and activities makes sense.

Ken is from the same state I'm originally from, Pennsylvania, but over on the other side, in Philly.  We talked about NYC a bit since he also has had plenty of exposure to there.  And about Buddhism; he is also a Qi Gong and meditation practitioner.  I don't have any background with Qi Gong but the Buddhism and meditation parts are familiar.  We covered a lot on personal practice variations, and how Buddhism works out interpreted as Western philosophy, and considered Buddhism in relation to tea practice.

In writing about all these talks some degree of a lack of a central theme makes it hard to summarize what was covered, all the more so in this version.  I can start with the Talking Tea podcast background.


Talking Tea


Ken mentioned that he started this years ago to further his own self-education in tea background, which is a familiar theme with bloggers too, just less of a formal process and output for them.  In reviewing what he has covered the range is fairly broad.  I caught a version about Meghalya teas recently (an region in India), and an interview with Brother Anthony (An Sonjae), the main name that comes up in relation to tea themes in South Korea.  He came up in a meetup discussion about association with the Penn State Tea Club not so long ago.

Ken talked us through an elaborate planned out alcohol infusion experiment that related to a podcast episode.  That went a half dozen steps beyond what normal media coverage of a sub-theme gets to, never mind informal blog posting.  A tea vendor cooperated with a local spirits manufacturer to host an offsite, hotel-based alcoholic drink tasting session, which is complicated to arrange in the US. The podcast version would include more details, and the results of the alcohol infusion trials.

It sounded like a lot to take on as a hobby interest, not just that more developed event, but an audio podcast format in general.  Ken mentioned that rather than ramp up version production over covid times he has kept the pace moderate.  In part that related to being busy with other work scope.  Then he also added that lots of vendors are hosting lots of forms of more and less formal podcasts and online gatherings now, so he doesn't see that range as a gap to be filled over the last year and a half.  

I've written regularly about discovering new forms of these types of channels and versions, most recently about Discord channels hosting them, but Youtube and Instagram versions are common now too.  Crimson Lotus is an example of a vendor holding a video podcast version, Farmerleaf an example of a Discord audio only version, and Cody of the Ooolong Drunk blog holds regular Instagram based podcast sessions.  Elyse of Tealet seems to bridge from some of those forms into multi-channel events of different kinds, some more like seminars and some just random streaming.

Ken's approach to a podcast seems a little more considered, planned, and structured than almost all of those, more like a conventional media approach.  Maybe Farmerleaf one on one interview discussions don't fall too far from that theme, but as live sessions the result includes whatever it includes, and those seem a bit conversational.  Cody's version is quite social, which can be nice, or I suppose someone could see the small talk and extension beyond tea themes as not being of interest.  We've talked about extending these informal meetups to be a recorded and shared version in the past, but never did, because it would diminish the informal feel.


only the first of a longer list


Tea as Buddhist meditation


This could seem a little disappointing as a finding, since we discussed how tea practice could be used as meditation or mindfulness practice, but didn't get far with seeing it as closely linked.  I'm not really a great reference for meditation practice, but I have informally practiced that in the past, and went through a few weeks of guided instruction during regular sessions while ordained as a Thai monk.  In general a lot of Thai "city monks" leave off meditation practice after spending a lot of their time chanting in services and ceremonies, but I did visit a local meditation center daily at that time, one hosted by monks at the next temple over.


with Nong On, who is now the oldest of our three cats


Why wouldn't it be great mediation experience to brew and appreciate tea?  Formal meditation is something else than people tend to describe as meditational.  It's nothing too exotic or hard to relate to, but relaxing and paying attention to tea experience, or walking in nature, or whatever else, can overlap but it's not the same.  Related to the overlap part there isn't much to discuss that isn't already familiar ground; it can provide a good opportunity to relax and pay attention to the present moment, and to turn off a broad range of other distractions.  If a half an hour of that experience every other day helps calm and center someone then in a broad sense it is meditation.  In the narrower sense it's still not, related to seated meditation, calming your mind, watching breath, and noticing thoughts pass, which brings about some degree of inner experience change the rest of the time.  That involves a lower degree of external stimulus and can result in a different effect (per a standard take, and to a large extent to my past experience).

It can be a problem that focus on aesthetic forms or relatively trivial calming themes can be presented as Buddhist practice, when they are sort of that, and sort of not.  Getting a massage in a spa is quite calming, but not really equivalent to Buddhist meditation.  Wearing robes could seem pleasant, or having Buddha images around can be decorative, and a good reminder of some ideals, but I personally see no connection with that to meditation or mindfulness practices.  Being in nature is great; to me there's more overlap in just being outdoors than relates to wearing natural fiber clothes, lighting candles, burning incense, or playing New Age music.  But again I think if tea exposure is experienced as calming, as a means towards connecting with the present moment, then there's a lot to that, just not necessarily a lot to be said about it.


I have no problem with people combining interest in tea and aesthetics, I just don't


Ken talked about his formal meditation practice a little, but not to the extent of delving into how it works, for example in relation to breathing techniques, or daily life effects.  There's a Talking Tea podcast episode about Taoism that goes further into tea and meditation practice themes, it's just not entirely about that.  It would represent his take on Eastern religion and meditation practices better than these earlier comments, which are really written from my own point of view, and as an interview it would include background input from that guest as well. 

Maybe it's as well that people tend to connect interest in Buddhism and Eastern Philosophy with tea, even though related to formal practice the overlap can seem limited.


this can be associated with Taoism, but it's also easy to overstate the connection


Tea origin stories


It's not typical that the circle of friends who always join (Ralph, Suzana, and Huyen) end up covering their own initial connection to tea stories, but since Ken has that interview background it was easier for him to consider and raise this sort of point in discussion.  I think I heard and shared more about my own background than we've been through in any other single session, with some details about the other coming up that I'd not heard, even though we've been meeting and talking for a year and a half now.  

I hadn't heard Huyen's family's complete story related to two brothers founding two different tea businesses, although I was familiar with her working for one of them, Tra Viet, a gift shop company that sells tea.  


Huyen and her brother Dung looking amazing (photo credit her FB profile)



their spirits and their daily life is beautiful (just check out her Instagram page)


Ralph covered how his earliest family related starting points went.  Then Ken also described his early origins with tea, which led through and connected with other Asian culture practices, the Qi Gong and meditation themes.  It was really interesting.  In a story that comes up in different forms Ken was exposed to tea in two forms over time, related to drinking moderate quality Chinatown shop tea (like gunpowder), then later onto what tea enthusiasts tend to drink, the rest of the range.


New Kan Man NYC Chinatown store (a theme we discussed, with more on there in this post)



To some extent that kind of thing works better as a personal discussion, tied to social connections, than hearing many different personal versions in those informal podcast sessions I mentioned catching parts of.  A 5 or 10 minute version wouldn't drag on, but hearing over and over about someone running across a shop or knowing a friend into tea can just repeat.  

To be clearer introductions to tea is a sub-theme I'm interested in for more than one reason.  It can be interesting for story value, but it's also worth considering how tea awareness spreads, or why it doesn't, related to coffee and bubble tea interest dominating that of "real tea."  All those online channels and content forms I've mentioned wouldn't be of interest to someone not already into better than average tea.  Text based tea blogs are even less likely to be of interest to most tea enthusiasts, it seems, which is understandable.  The main tea theme is the actual experience, not reading and learning, or watching video.

Having a friend or family member into tea is the main introduction to tea story, or another Asian culture related interest leading to tea exposure.  I kept seeing Thai tea in grocery stores, and buying some, and did the same in visiting other countries.  Oddly I was into tisanes for 15 years in the US prior to developing that interest, and never accidentally ran across "real tea."  Today I think I would; things have changed.


Conclusion


This is the least focused on the person joining any summary has been, with good reason.  We talked about foreign cultures, covid themes, our own connections to tea, and shops and outlets in different places, not so much about Ken and his own tea interest.  I don't even know his favorite type of tea; maybe we could've focused more on that.  

Letting discussions take an organic path lands on different results, and it was as well that we made it through so much interesting scope, instead of getting into what he's drinking, or the gear he owns.  Huyen was the only other person on time for the session, so we did an earlier limited participation version talking more about Tea Masters and tea in Vietnam than we typically do, and Suzana joined really late, so we talked about Indian teas towards the end.  That transition of themes was nice. We tend to either get pretty far into covid discussion or skip that part, and it was nice comparing notes about experiences in this session (which of course I'm not summarizing here; everyone knows how the pandemic is going, we just add more local detail in the discussions).

It makes perfect sense to me that when we talked to a podcast host and Buddhism practitioner the focus wasn't on him personally.  The opposite shouldn't have happened.  Most typically one or two of us tend to talk less than the others, with conversations settling into a two-way form, and that didn't really happen this time, which I also see as positive.  When we are talking to a tea producer it's as well that almost all focus is on them, and what they are doing, and related background, but for a more open social form discussion the more even balance is really nice.  At times I can miss just talking to Ralph, Huyen, and Suzana without any theme or topic, and this session was like that, with Ken as just one more of our friends.