Yakudoshi Ceremony
`Yaku` means `calamity` (a disaster) and `toshi` means year, so `yakudoshi` kind of means `bad luck age`.
For Japanese men it`s the ages 25, 42 and 61, and for women 19, 33 and 37.
Men who don`t usually join the Konomiya hadaka matsuri sometimes decide to join it when they reach these ages, in order to get rid of this `bad luck`.
Anyway, on Sunday I attended a special ceremony at my local shrine for people of `yakudoshi` age. About 70 people attended. It was an interesting ceremony - the priest read some mantras [shingon] , then some guys threw black beans around the room (one got stuck behind my ear. Fortunately the lady in front of me didn`t see it - she was excitedly picking them up & putting them in her pockets), then he read all our names. That took a while; I almost fell asleep...
Afterwards we received these gifts. I`m not a big fan of dried black beans, but I love Ichigo Daifuku (strawberries in soft ricecake) - yum!
Have you ever attended this kind of ceremony?
TERAGOYA Ichi
TERAGOYA Gifu
Tiny
TERAGOYA Ginan
投稿日 2012-02-13 13:55
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On the other hand, if you would eat your age's beans on Setsubun (3th February) after Bean-throwing ceremony, it would get rid of your `bad luck`.
投稿日 2012-02-17 15:24
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投稿日 2012-02-13 19:15
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Now, I'm 3..... oh! :)
I've never attended ceremony like this.
It seems feel sleepy...I think so too,
but not too bad, because you could get Ichigo Daifuku!
I also love it!
It's a season of strawberry soon!
投稿日 2012-02-17 15:28
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投稿日 2012-02-16 12:35
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投稿日 2012-02-17 15:30
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投稿日 2012-02-16 22:00
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Hopely your 'yakudoshi' will be 躍年!!
投稿日 2012-02-17 15:32
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投稿日 2012-02-17 10:54
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So,I went to shrine to exorcism.
I like Ichigo Daifuku,too.
And,I love Kurikinnton Daifuku!
Do you know it ?
投稿日 2012-02-17 15:37
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I`ve tried kurikinton (sweet potato & chestnut, right?) a couple of times, but I don`t like it so much; I don`t like starchy [denpun, nori, suta-chi?] sweets so much.