Japanese Tea Ceremony “Silence” originally nothing – Tea.com

Japanese Tea Ceremony “Silence” mlC Tea Net

“Silence” is the highest state of the Japanese tea ceremony, without which there would be no meaning of the tea ceremony. Silence” in Sanskrit means “stillness”, “peace”, “quietness”, and in the Buddhist text it means “death”, “death”, “death”, “death”, “death”, and “death”. In Buddhist texts, it means “death”, “nirvana”, “nothingness”. When a tea drinker or a Zen practitioner completes the negation of all things, he or she enters a world of nothingness without any sound or color. mlC Tea.com

Death is more primitive and belonging to life, and occupies a longer period of time. Death is absolute and life is relative. Death is also known as the world of “nothing”, “nothing” is the root of “something”, the Buddhist idea of reincarnation gives people the hope of regeneration. mlC Tea Net

When the tea people denied all the inherent aesthetic value, abandoned all the ideological constraints, a new work of art, a new form of art came into being. mlC Tea Net