Showing posts with label tea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tea. Show all posts

Monday, March 19, 2012

Adon Olam ~ Teapot no. 61 (561)

Adon Olam ~ Teapot no. 61 (561) ~ Tea with the Buddha babies

...Wondrous messengers that they are... 

Thank you, Yuki, thank you, Jesse, thank you, Bodhi,

 for coming through today; it's been a while.

© Nicole Raisin Stern

Colored pencil and black fountain pen ink on paper 


****

Adon Olam: Hymn or Responsive Chant (by Reb Zalman Schacter-Shalomi)


You were cosmic LORD, YAH Malakh, before there even was a world
Then Your will all things did make, YAH Melekh we call You now.
Once when all things will cease to be YAH Yimlokh still true will be
You were, You are, eternally resplendent to infinity.
You alone, there are not two to join as friends, as lovers do.
Beginningless and without end You keep all one by plan and strength.
You are my GOD, REDEEMER, Life Protecting me in war, in strife.
My holy haven and my flag, my cup of health for what I lack.
Into Your hand I trust my breath, You breathe in me by night by day.
My body is Your tool, Your gift. With You as mine I'm not afraid.

Sunday, March 11, 2012

Teapot no. 558 ~ tea with plum blossoms

© Nicole Raisin Stern

Teapot no. 58 (558) of my 6th Set of 100 Teapots
Watercolor and fountain pen ink on paper.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Milagro tea

Awoke to the magic of wondering, "what miracles will happen today?" These words, mixed with excitement stirred ... and went into a juicer with watermelon rinds and romaine lettuce to became my morning elixir. I breathed in - more excitement - and out - joyous calm. Swallowing more enthusiasm, I went out walking with a canine companion when two coyote friends trot by and check us out. Canine companion's ears point up to the cloudy sky. A quail family skits into the underbrush, to the shaded grove of safety that prickly pear and palo verde branches make. Baby desert hare stops in its tracks, lizard scurries behind mica-embedded rock, mourning doves coo, "hoo-hoo-hoo-hooo" and I am plucking tunas, those deep red, purple-y fruits of the prickly pear, with metal tongs, which I plop one by one into a sack. I make a tea of this and call it "milagro tea", a local blend of all that is in my path and breathing me today, in this precious moment, this infusion of Beloved elements we call life. Come, share this tea, there's an abundant supply, and miracles abound.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Teapot no. 500 and a couple others...

Teapot no. 100 ~ Butterfly & Rosemary ~ no. 500 in my 5th set of "100 Teapots"
Elephant & Mouse Tea Party ~ Teapot no. 96 (496)


Teapot no. 95 (495) ~ Jesse & Yuki Tea Party






 Teapot no. 90 (490) ~ Yuki Watches Jesse & Bodhi Jumping On The Trampoline

See the entire collection of 500 teapots


Tuesday, December 07, 2010

Teapots 46 & 47 ~ 5th Set of 100 Teapots


Watercolor on hanshi.



Watercolor color and black fountain pen ink on hanshi.

Saturday, December 04, 2010

tea in starlight



I painted this one, too, by low lamplight and candle light at night. I like seeing the light in the darkness.



teapot no. 45 (445) of my 5th Set of 100 Teapots
Watercolor and black fountain pen ink on hanshi.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Light emerges


© Nicole Raisin Stern
Watercolor and black fountain pen ink on hanshi.

This is teapot no. 44 (444) in my 5th set of 100 Teapots
View Set 5 here

☆☼☽

Light emerges
as it always does

Just trust
and wait

The Light is always here
even when all seems dark

~ Nicole Raisin Stern

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Happy Year of the TIGER



© Nicole Raisin Stern

Watercolor and pen on Arches cold pressed paper. With Ganesha skate boarding.

Woo-Hoo

Saturday, January 16, 2010

The power of feeling and pretending in the Practice of the Way



I'm thinking a lot these days about the link between my thinking and feeling of things and what I experience - my so-called 'reality'. In my own experience, I see that the power of feeling/thinking trumps reality. In other words, what I think and feel creates my experiences of reality. More and more, I am choosing to use my thoughts and feelings in the service of becoming, manifesting, and learning all that I want to become, manifest, and learn. I say, why wait for a certain event or condition to feel joyous, healthy, and abundant in all ways? With continual practice, I experience being joy-filled now. I feel the great, good health that I enjoy now, and I give thanks for all the wonderful abundance that is mine here and now, and so on.

I learned from Thich Nhat Hanh that "there is no way to peace, peace is the way." That is, we must feel, practice, and pretend that the peace is inside of us (because it is), even in those times when the 'reality' outside of us claims otherwise. There is no way to happiness, happiness is the way. If we want to change reality, we must become the change we want to see (to paraphrase M.K. Gandhi), and to live what we want to change even while living in and with what we are wanting to change, is none other than the Practice of the Way. In his teaching, Tibetan Buddhist master Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche used the metaphor of the Great Eastern Sun: "hold the sadness and pain of samsara in your heart and at the same time the power and vision of the Great Eastern Sun. Then the warrior can make a proper cup of tea." And if you know me, that's the main thing, a proper cup of tea :)



About the image:
This is teapot no. 11 (311) in my 100 Teapots Series, Set 4,
"The Book of tea and light infusion: written by God" (though it looks like Goo)


Watercolor and red fountain pen ink on 180 lb. Arches cold pressed paper
© Nicole Raisin Stern

Saturday, January 09, 2010

Tea on Dash

teapot no. 55 (355) ~ kuruma de ocha (tea on dash)

"Tea on Dash" is teapot painting no. 55 in Set 4 of my 100 Teapot series paintings. I like painting my tea as I drink it.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

A winter meal


miso shiru


natto on rice


nori for the natto & rice


steamed kale


takuan (pickles)


tofu with grated daikon, soy sauce, and sprouts


sencha (green tea)

Friday, November 30, 2007

teapot no. 5


Drawn with red fountain pen ink in my handmade cha book. [click on photo for enlarged view of drawing].

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Sunday morning


Drinking puerh tea from little yixing cups in the cool air of morning, wrapped in my red woolen Nepalese shawl. I'm wrapped, not the tea, not the morning. Snug and cozy I am, watching steam rise from the cup. Jesse sits beside me on her woolen shawl which is really one of mine that I folded into a nest for her as I eat my breakfast. I feel the warmth of her furry silky body. Yuki's fur has a slight golden hue to it from the sunlight that filters in through the open blinds where he lays. He patiently waits for me to take him walking--and I will--after I finish my breakfast and do my stretches.

For the past few mornings after I wake up and eat, I've been doing a set of ten mindfulness movement exercises taught by Thich Nhat Hanh and his monks & nuns. I drew pictures (below) of each exercise and tacked them to my wall as a guide until they become "second nature" again. Hmmm, I wonder what first nature would be? Not doing exercises, probably...

In Monterey/Pacific Grove when I was acting as the faciltator for a weekly mindfulness meditation group, I was in charge of leading the exercises at the end of our meditation session. I had to count out loud and say, "breathing in, breathing out" during the appropriate stretches so that we'd all be moving and breathing in unison, more or less. My body remembers the movements. And I have memories of the friends with whom I meditated, breathed, smiled, stretched, and hugged. We always did hugging meditation after completing the mindfulness movements. In hugging meditation, the aim is to be fully present as we hug each other. We breathe mindfully in and out as we enjoy deep and simple touch.





P.S. the yummy breakfast you see above was my version of kayu, Japanese/Chinese rice "gruel." This time, the kayu consisted of brown rice, cabbage, kabocha squash, yellow onion, wakame, carrot, a few sesame seeds, shiitake, tofu, shoyu, miso, a few drops of sesame oil, and green onions.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

teapot no. 100 - team huddle

Finished my second set of 100 teapots.


Here are my helper pots, the models I used for many of my teapot drawings and paintings.

* * * * * * *

Here are the two sets:
#1: 100 teapots. Dec. 22, 2005-Oct. 2, 2006.
#2: 100 more teapots. Dec. 8, 2006-Oct. 31, 2007.

teapot no. 99 - bring your cups!

See the nearly completed set here.

Friday, October 26, 2007

teapot no. 96


Cut paper from a Japanese lunar calendar glued on paper with watercolor, sumi ink and brush.

getting closer!

Here's a legend to the brush characters:

土 earth
月 moon
茶 tea
心 heart/mind
水 water
火 fire
星 star
楽 joy

Click on picture to get a larger view.

Friday, October 19, 2007

teapots

For the past two months or so, I haven't posted any teapot drawings and paintings from my 100 more teapots set. So here are teapots 89 through 93 with 93 on top. And at the end, a couple of photos of my yixing tea set with puerh tea and a recent yummy breakfast.

This morning I enjoyed the freshness of cool autumn air (55ºF/13ºC) and sipped hot assam tea with my breakfast. I had a noodle breakfast, which consisted of soba noodles with a little soy sauce, sesame oil, and green onion; a bowl of lightly steamed kale; and a bowl of miso soup with wakame, bonito flakes, a drop of sesame oil, and a few green onions.