considerable manipulations, if treated in the right way. One expert said: “For the uninitiated…cup worship seems to be exaggerated and bordering upon archaic fetishism. A cup is treated like a living person. It is given a name, its biography is traced and recorded on the walls of the cases in which it is kept, and it is wrapped in silk of special grade... Before use, a cup is bathed in hot water (a bit longer in winter) to let it ‘revive’, then it is wiped with a linen napkin. On a hot day the napkin is brought in a cup, but it should not be wringed and folded. Instead it should be floating free in cool water, triangle-shaped. Having put a cup on the tatami, one’s hand must not proceed to the next movement; it must bid good-bye slowly to the cup in a ‘maintained perception’ mode, as if two friends were parting unwillingly” (Mazurik, 2003).
With such attention to ceremonial details and a desire to fill each detail