

Here is an entry about my Yamabushi Training…I have written reflections along with some of my journal entries during the pilgrimage. I have cut out large chunks of details to keep the Yamabushi Training secret.
Yamabushi training was much easier than I expected. I arrived in a room full of Japanese people trying to dress themselves in the Yamabushi costume. I had no idea what to expect. Nor did I have any idea how to put on the funny costume.
I can:t really mention much about the training because it is supposed to be kept a secret. I sealed the secrecy by putting my thumbprint in the sacred book in a secret ceremony in the middle of the night. I will say what is already widely known about it. Yamabushi training comes from the Shugendo religion. Hachiko (no ogi) was the founder. The religion venerates nature and incorporates Buddhism with Shinto. And I think there may be a little bit of Daoism thrown in the mix. It is a branch of the esoteric Shingon religion and places emphasis on training and ascetic practices. [During the Meiji Era, Buddhism was forced to separate from Shinto and this is one of the few existing sects that still practice them together].
Anyways, I had a vague familiarity with this before I started, but really researched it after I finished. Luckily a few people spoke English and they explained a few things about the religion to me. I didn`t really know what I was getting myself into, all I really knew was that I wanted to go hike the 3 sacred mountains with other pilgrims and stand under freezing waterfalls and just experience life―not necessarily find anything. After all, This is part of what I came here for, wasn't it?
The group was mostly made up with older women. The youngest girl there was a student (21 years old). For 4 days I felt like a pet to all the obachans (older women) who continuously fixed my costume, corrected my mistakes, and generally tried to make everything about me more Japanese so I could fit in. There is a saying in Japan: "the nail that doesn't fit, gets hammered down". (or something like that) Anyways, I was the non-fitting nail. By day 4, I was more closely aligned with the other nails, yet still a bit abnormal. Being the only foreigner, that seemed natural.
On the last day the male monks chose me to carry the sacred tree branch, which they put in the ground somewhere. Keep in mind that I am not entirely sure or aware of the meanings of all the things we did and rituals we performed. I have a general fuzzy idea at best. Usually only after the fact do I figure out the significance of my actions. Anyways, I was pleased that I got to help perform this ritual. There was a lot of chanting that was pretty hard to keep up with because it was all written in cursive Japanese that I can only read slowly.
1st day of training
Haguro san. Lots of breaks were taken so we could pray. There were tons of photographers!! No idea where those pictures are now. Also we had a much larger meal then I expected. Potato, fried/boiled tofu, some kind of vegetable, and rice+miso! I was trying to enjoy my meal slowly, think of every bite as I chewed, and contemplate the various people who worked so that such food could be before me. Aki looks over at me…”Hurry up!!!!” she says with urgency. This was epitome of the Japanese meal—speed eating! Even while “fasting,” and “training,” we were speed eating! It blew my mind. No food meditation for me!
2nd day
On this day, I am disappointed by the large amounts of rice we are forced to consume. It is far too much rice for me and I try to pass it off on others but sometimes I am too late. It looks really bad if I don’t finish my rice too, so I have to finish. ......
There is a women here who thinks I know more Japanese than I do and she is always trying to help me. It is very sweet but I feel bad because sometimes I don’t understand her. She goes through great efforts to try to explain to me—the big buffoon gaijin! I do appreciate many of her explanations.
Yudono san was the most sacred of the 3 mountains of Dewa Sanzan and a place that people weren’t supposed to talk about…Not surprisingly…this was my favorite day of the trip. The day of rebirth. Living in Japan I’ve gotten used to having no idea what to expect next or having no schedule of events. I thought we were going to have a difficult hike up Yudono san and go to the very top but it turns out that it’s a rather easy mountain and now you can drive up it. We didn’t go the car route though. We went through an old, overgrown shrine trail through the river. Wearing our white pilgrim costumes we hiked through the river, scrambled up the rocks, and up the lush mountainside, clapping at shrines and beautiful kami-inspired scenery along the way. Some of the older Obachans elected to walk along the easy car route though. I kept wondering at every waterfall-was this the freezing waterfall that we were going to stand under? It never was. We came to the abode of the main deity of Yudono san. It resides in a large rust colored rock from the top of which a spring of hot water flows. The rock itself was impressive and it was nice to walk up it. After some chanting and praying, it was time for our rebirth in the falls. I was ready. Until I actually felt how cold the water was. Hiking though the river at the bottom wasn’t so bad, but this water seemed to have come from another source! It was freezing! A kind of unpleasant, numbing freeze. I couldn’t stand to have my feet in it for long so I tried to avoid it, but then it was my turn. I went in. The priests stayed in the water the entire time to chant with us and (bless us??) I’m not entirely sure what they were saying, nor how they managed to stand for so long in the water! The priest stood behind me, as I was submerged below the water, he was chanting things. He made some sort of symbol on my back with his hands. Then I joined another woman and we went under the falls together chanting “Kami Hari Domo Kami Hari Domo Kami Hari Domo”. The falls were freezing but when I was in, it was ok. I wanted to do it again. It was an incredible feeling. One uber zealous woman went in almost 5 times!! The whole Yudono san experience makes me want to do the pilgrimage again next year. I really did feel reborn. The namban—pepper smoke, midnight wake-ups, and speed eating, I could do without.
At Yudono san the Buddhas are at the left of the sacred rust colored rock. To take part in the ritual in which you stick a paper doll to the cliffside where water trickles down you had to have paid extra money to be a special pilgrim. Later I read that the this place is where the ancestral spirits who are now considered to be “buddhas” come into spiritual contact with those who perform the offerings.
Summary of my thoughts on this religion―clap twice at things beautiful in nature and you will find God. Purify yourself and don:t forget the Kami. My God moment came when I watched the sunset with another older Japanese woman and then we had a nice hug afterwards. No words were exchanged. It was truly the best hug from a Japanese person that I have ever given/received.