A tatami mat is a pallet of coarse straw covered with a layer of tightly woven, fine reed affixed with borders of plain or patterned fabric. A tatami room is a space floored with these rectangular mats of standard size, each the area needed by a human lying at rest. Tatami is firm but giving, cool in summer and warm to the bare foot in winter. The feel of the mat is rough against the grain, smooth with it. The reed is green at first and powerfully sweet-smelling, soon fading to an odorless ivory.
To sit on tatami is to be grounded... literally. You have the freedom to sit straight, to slouch or to lie, head supported on one hand. For some--for me--whether at home at the end of the day or out at a convivial spot like Inaka, the floor is the only place to sit with a meal, a drink and good company, crossing or splaying one's legs, changing position as the evening unfolds. To truly relax and to reclaim one's center, a chair will no longer do.
Tatami: one of the simple pleasures of life in Japan.
Once in a decade
Filling the whole house
The smell of new tatami
--Julian
[いいですね] Surprised to find no mention here of tatami burn.
D
Posted by: Only a Blockhead | 01/11/2008 at 06:22 PM
No mention of tatami burn as I've never heard of it. It sounds painful (and perhaps erotically fascinating?). Do tell!
--Julian
Posted by: Only a Blockhead | 01/11/2008 at 06:35 PM