I am a monk in the Temple of the Great Lingam and the Divine Hole, where we worship the father and mother gods who made the world and keep it fertile. It is a great honour, as only the best students get to be monks. We are tested at 16 on our knowledge of the Holy Book, mathematics and knowledge of the world, and the best go on to further studies. At 18, half of us get to be monks for three years. Men only, of course. Girls stop their education when they are blessed with their first bleeding, and only men may visit the temple. Women can pay a man to carry out devotions on their behalf.
We serve for three years, and when I finish I am sure to get a pretty wife and a good position, unless I go on to be a priest, of course. My family are so proud of what I am doing. I know my father made very many offerings at the temple to pray that I get selected as a monk, so I am grateful to him for that.
There are two places of worship in the temple, the Great Lingam, and the Divine Hole, or Yoni, with sculpture representing these holy objects, and people come to worship according to what they want, as they give different blessings. Obviously if they want a male child they worship the Great Lingam, while if they want a daughter or a female calf then it is the Divine Hole. There are many other reasons. The Great Lingam is for rain, the Divine Hole for an abundant harvest, for example.
The temple is open from dawn till dusk each day, except on festivals, and the main job of the monks is to deal with those who come to make their offerings to the god, and to make a contribution to the temple, of course. We work in shifts, but overall we serve worshippers for four hours a day, study for four hours a day, exercise so that we remain fit and supple, and do the necessary jobs, such as cleaning, cooking, washing, repairs, tending our herb garden and sorting the contributions. Worshippers come from villages several days journey away to this important place.
To worship, the citizen must make suitable contribution to the upkeep of the temple, enter his lingam into the receptacle of the gods, and discharge his seed. The monks and priests are the receptacles, as I will now describe.
When we start as monks, we have to fast and pray, and make offerings to the Great Lingam and the Divine Hole for three days. We help each other to cleanse our own holes, and then we are each blessed by a priest inserting his lingam and depositing his holy seed. From then on, our holes are also divine and may receive the seeds of the worshippers. They may be called yonis. Likewise, the priest's seed makes our mouth divine for this purpose.
Of course, we receive training for this, and are assigned a mentor from the second or third year monks. They test us on our familiarity with the Holy Book, and teach us the rituals and practices of the temple. They show us how to clean our holes so that they are fit for worship, and insert small models of the Great Lingam many times each day. These are holy objects, many very old, and it is a privilege to learn to accommodate them. They also put their own lingams into our mouths and we practise the technique we will use on the worshippers. They must not put their own seed into us, of course, until we have been blessed by that of the priest. However, they are usually the first after the priest. It is a holy thing, but it is also a great joy for the new monk and his tutor.
Our yonis and mouths are available at any time for the priests, whose seeds give us blessings. Some priests are so holy that they pray several times a day. We should ejaculate each day (unless ill), but not waste it. All the seeds of the monks and priests are sacred and must not be spilled on the ground. If we are very fortunate, a priest will tell us to put our seeds in his mouth or Divine Hole. Some priests do this more than others, and some monks are given this honour more often. Until I marry, I must make sure that my seed always goes into a priest or monk and should carry out this act of worship each day if possible.