Buddha Lite (Now with 0g of substance!)

It's everything a tourist trap needs. It's full of beautiful ornate stuff, and spectacle, and bursting with tradition, and the implication of purpose.

Old robed men drone in languages the tourists don't understand, into a microphone hooked up to speakers strategically designed to resonate. Gilt dragons wind around the columns, gripping perfect orb light fixtures, ripped from streetlamps somewhere. You wear pink traditional clothes that look, in the dying light, like pajamas for an enlightenment-themed slumber party.

That's what it is, after all. A slumber party for you and 39 strangers. Two days of photo-opping-- "Hey! Look! I'm doing what real monks do! I'm bowing when he bangs a block of wood! I'm sitting cross-legged and rigid through the entire meal! THIS WILL MAKE FOR ONE AWESOME FACEBOOK PROFILE PIC! *click!*"

It's the tradeoff. The monks work with the slimeball from the tourism board who point-blank tells them he's using them for his numbers. They have to babysit 40-odd foreigners with cameras and a keen eye for "What's neat." They pass out pamphlets that bury their lives and their temple in the past as "a living museum." And in exchange, they get to keep their temple. They get to eat well and add new wings to their buildings anad never worry about Lotte Co. Inc. weaseling their land out from under them.

It all feels familiar: standing and bowing to the golden pantheonic paintings that stretch to the stratosphere ceiling. Listening to old robed men speak words I don't understand. It's just like every other church I've been in (only this time, ASIAN THEMED!) Knowing that I'm supposed to be feeling something spiritual, something transcendent, tethering me to God-- but I don't.

I just spot the calculations; the eight thousand tiny decisions to sell you on an idea: You are in the presence of divinity. The robes-- there's no real REASON for them, not in terms of the religion-- but they do sell us on tradition. The multi-tiered corners-up architecture-- sure it's a symbol of... whatever; but it also looks super-neat and HEY! We should go THERE. And look at the bell and that huge drum, and how about all those tiny Buddha statues behind the glass cases. All that detail work, they MUST be on to something.

They weren't designed to snag tourists and make money. They were designed to snag non-believers and maybe hook them in long enough to get to some actual philosophical or spiritual case. The robes aren't an integral part of the faith, they're a social tool-- at first, they were not that much more outlandish than the other garb of the times, but just a new layer onto the symbolism of a fledgling religion. But that layer froze, and time moved on. Styles adapted, but not the monk-robes. Those stayed the same. They are not for the monks-- a way of bringing them closer to the divine. They are for us-- a way of separating them from the rest of us: "Why's that guy dress the way he does? Oh, he's devoutly Buddhist? Oh, well I'm picking up on so many social cues right now that influence my superficial perception of him and Buddhism."

And that's what this whole experience was: We weekend Buddhists only get the trial version, with ads made of grave men and big echoey rooms, and the implication of grand, arcane wisdom.

8 comments:

floraldeoderant said...

In response to your implicit question: "Well what did you expect from a 2-day temple stay?" I have to answer: Something to do with Buddhism. Not just "Here's some pretty stuff for you to look at, there, isn't that quaint."

Kara said...

I don't think the important distinction is between What Happens at Weekend Temple Stays and What You Wanted to Happen at Weekend Temple Stays. I think it's between What Happens at Weekend Temple Stays and What Buddhism Is Actually About. And, uh, you made it, so I'm right there with ya.

Unknown said...

Oh man, everything is so weird in foreign countries! Why don't they just do things like white people do? Save everyone the trouble.

;P

But yeah, I hear ya on the "super touristy" bit. Though considering how much people complained about having to make the little changes in their diets/daily schedules they *were* expected to handle, mayhaps watering things down was a wise idea.

I dunno, I came away from it knowing at least that I could never, ever survive as a monk. (Single meals of rice and plants doesn't really strike me, with my Americanized notion of portions, as "eating well," but that might just be me.) Or, you know, a terribly devout Buddhist. (By the way, Buddhists don't do the "god" thing.)

And as for the neat, "multi-tiered corners-up architecture-- sure it's a symbol of... whatever" -- they're just a throwback to traditional architecture, and is like a symbol of those wacky Koreans' distaste for letting rainwater pool all grody and stagnant-like on their roofs before leaking.

Unknown said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said...

*likely

I don't know, those roofs could be super special and symbolic-like, my knowledge base of architecture is limited to. Like. Nothing. Don't mean to take the magic out of it ;D

floraldeoderant said...

@Kara - Can't it be both?

@Jei -
*Roofs: Yes. The monk said something about the up-turned corners of the roofs symbolizing something, after we walked around the dead-person-spire.

*God: See? What good was the experience, at all? I hung out with Buddhist monks and all I got was this crappy disposition.

Kara said...

'course it can, but you said in your 第一 comment up there that you wanted Something to do with Buddhism. I's just saying that Buddhisms out there, and also not what you experienced.

Unknown said...

lulz, you have no idea what that monk said! Nor does most of the group, thanks to our super nice but super awful translator. He did say that the number of tiers on the pagoda symbolized something (related to the path to enlightenment, I'm sure).

Pff, those monks were awesome! Especially the rice cake dudes. They would be sad if they knew you blamed them for your disposition.