
Hotel room on the 17th floor, Osaka, Japan. Hi everyone, this is Tiramit with Jiab here visiting our Thai niece M… some readers will know of M when she was little with all her questions addressed to me as “Toong-Ting.” Now she is 19 and doesn’t call me that anymore, calls me “T-T” instead (sounds more like ‘dee dee’). M is fluent in English, now studying Japanese language, and aiming for a similar level of fluency or enough to get her up to college-level … after that, let’s see.
I’m amazed, M took responsibility for nearly everything to do with getting the apartment selected, location ok, rent ok, (Japan is not cheap). Size of rooms, tiny but ok. All the forms to fill in to do with her one-year visa and there was all the paperwork to do with sending the cattos to Japan.

All of this done online in Bangkok by M, reading enough Japanese from her one-year class in BKK before coming. Jiab helped with setting up the bank and the school facilitated some of the stuff, but M did most of it, also a couple of phone calls to the house agent in Japan and that was it!
She left for Osaka with Jiab (overnight flight from Bangkok), checked out the house agents, selected a place next to a Buddhist temple and there was some waiting in a coffee shop near to the temple to get the confirmation from the owner of the apartment. Then PING! … a text message saying ok, confirmed, and they had a moving-in date.
Ok so let’s get to the airport and they were back in Bangkok in three days. How was it done without a single hitch and in such a short time? Vipaka Kamma (karma) is the answer. We are all studying the Buddha’s teaching and actively involved with our Buddhist groups, so the apartment next to the temple just conjured itself up, and “dōzo,” there you are. This apartment was waiting for you, M and the cattos, rest here, rest assured, take refuge in the triple gem.
It wasn’t till after the apartment was confirmed that I did a google search on our nearby Shitennō-ji Temple, and found out about the founder, Prince Shōtoku, 1,430 years ago. So, I’ll leave you with a few Wikipedia paragraphs and see you this time next week back in Bangkok.

Shitennō-ji; 四天王寺 (Temple of the Four Heavenly Kings), regarded as the first and oldest Buddhist temple in Japan. The construction of Shitennō-ji was commissioned by Prince Shōtoku in the year 593 as part of a national project to promote Buddhism. The prince invited three Korean carpenters to come to Japan and lead the construction of Shitennō-ji.
The Prince is renowned for modernizing the government administration and for promoting Buddhism in Japan. Over successive generations, a devotional cult arose around the figure of Prince Shōtoku for the protection of Japan, the Imperial Family, and for Buddhism. Key religious figures claimed inspiration or visions attributed to Prince Shōtoku.
Shōtoku was an ardent Buddhist and is traditionally attributed the authorship of the Sangyō Gisho commentaries on the Lotus Sutra, the Vimalakirti Sutra, and the Śrīmālādevī (Siṃhanāda Sūtra). The first of these commentaries, Hokke Gisho, is traditionally dated to 615 and thus regarded as “the first Japanese text”, in turn making Shōtoku the first known Japanese writer.
There is a letter to Emperor Yang of Sui which contains the earliest known written instance in which Japan is referred to as “the land of the rising sun.”
He is also known for bearing the Sanskrit Dharma name Bhavyaśīla which was awarded to him by Bodhidharma. Bhava (भव) means being, worldly existence, becoming, birth, production, origin – also: habitual or emotional tendencies which lead to the arising of the sense of self, as a mental phenomenon. Śīla (in Sanskrit) or sīla (in Pāli), means “behavioral discipline”, “morality”, “virtue” or “ethics” in Buddhism
A legend claims that when Bodhidharma came to Japan, he met with Prince Shōtoku whilst under the guise of a starving beggar. The Prince asked the beggar to identify himself, but the man did not reply. Instead of going ahead, Shōtoku gave him food, drink, and covered him with his purple garment, telling him to “lie in peace”.
The second day, Shōtoku sent a messenger to the starving man, but he was already dead. Hereupon, he was greatly grieved and ordered his burial. Shōtoku later thought the man was no ordinary man for sure, and sending another messenger, discovered the earth had not been disturbed. On opening the tomb there was no body inside, and the Prince’s purple garment lay folded on the coffin. The Prince then sent another messenger to claim the garment, and he continued to wear it just as before. Struck by awe, the people praised the Prince: “How true it is that a sage knoweth a sage.”
[A closing note about Shinto] Shinto is often cited alongside Buddhism as one of Japan’s two main religions, and the two often differ in focus; Shinto is a nature religion – the belief that the natural world is an embodiment of divinity, sacredness or spiritual power. The focus in Shinto is on adapting to life’s pragmatic requirements. While Buddhism emphasises the idea of transcending the cosmos, which it regards as being replete with suffering. The focus is on attaining liberation from the clinging to existence, marked by impermanence (anicca), dissatisfaction/suffering (dukkha), and the absence of lasting essence (anattā).

A delightful post .. and good to hear that M is evolving in her own way 💐🙏🏻🥰
Yes, you can see the development into an adult and soon off in her own direction
M sounds wonderfully capable. Nice that you and Jiab are visiting M and the cattos. Have fun and safe trip.
We can see how well she has organised herself and the cattos in a world of their own
Oh, and how great to be living next door to a temple!!
Yes, and it being the oldest Buddhist temple in Osaka is such an amazing… can’t think of the word – happenstance?
this was the first temple we visited in Japan… way back in 2016. Had no idea it was the oldest Buddhist temple in the country, or all this history about it. Very interesting to learn about the place. Thanks for posting
Back in 2016… well, if you were like me, we’d neither of us even know about google Now people are able to check out every word that was spoken since who knows when! Or maybe google was just getting to be known in 2016… thanks for being in touch
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