A poem from a lay friend written during a retreat at Deer Park Monastery describing her encounter with Thích Nhất Hạnh in the dish line.
Enter the scene:
Noble silence
Dish line
After breakfast
Zen retreat
The Venerable Zen Master
Senior monk
Ordination teacher
Steps behind me
In the line
To hand rinse
Morning’s used
Plates, cups and spoons
I am a simple beginner
A laywoman,
For only $3 per month or $28 per year, you can read as much as you want!
A digital subscription includes unlimited access to current articles–and some exclusive digital content–released throughout each week, over thirty years of articles in our Dharma archive, as well as PDFs of all back issues.
A poem from a lay friend written during a retreat at Deer Park Monastery describing her encounter with Thích Nhất Hạnh in the dish line.
Enter the scene:
Noble silence
Dish line
After breakfast
Zen retreat
The Venerable Zen Master
Senior monk
Ordination teacher
Steps behind me
In the line
To hand rinse
Morning’s used
Plates, cups and spoons
I am a simple beginner
A laywoman, and
I know who he is:
a Zen master
Even though he wears
the plain brown robes
of any ordinary monk
I am alert
The thought passes,
The Venerable is behind me
Holding his dish
I should offer to wash his dishes
for him.
In the silence, shyness comes
I wait in the space
uncertain. My
offer unextended,
stuck, hanging between thought and behavior
Suddenly a junior monk appears.
He has been working,
making breakfast.
He has his blue work apron
tied over his brown robes.
He sees the Venerable
Waiting in the dish line.
He bows to the Venerable
and extends his palms, open up.
The Venerable slowly transfers
His plate, cup and spoon
to the junior monk’s open
hands
Then smiles politely
The Venerable gently walks away
with powerful firm steps.
He has been relieved of the dishline.
The junior monk wants to
Go back to his kitchen
duties.
He solicits the junior nun
Now appeared standing behind me
in the dish line
Eye contact.
Smiles.
Bows.
In noble silence,
The Venerable’s dishes transfer gently
from the junior monk’s hands
to those of the junior nun.
The junior monk returns to the kitchen.
The junior nun is in the dish line
Behind me
Holding her plate, cup and spoon.
I am amused.
I turn and bow to her.
Eye contact.
Smiles.
I say quietly, “I will wash them.”
She gently transfers the Venerable monk’s
plate, cup and spoon
to my care.
I am in the dish line
Handwashing the instruments
of the Venerable Zen Master’s breakfast
I smile and observe
He has eaten grapefruit.
I scrape the empty peels
into the compost bin.
Log In
You can also login with your password. Don't have an account yet? Sign Up
We have cookies! We use them to analyse our website traffic and provide email and social media features.