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The most sacred place in the world is spirituality.
When I saw the Phrasupati Temple in Kathmandu, Nepal, a Shiva saint was chanting. Two broken bricks could burn incense, and two fingers would hold up the thick scriptures. For example, the staff of Swayambhu Monastery used oil paintings to make two Buddha eyes as soon as they splashed them. The Jews at the Wailing Wall wore artificial sky eyes.
There is a poem in Rubaiyah, I found a door without a key, and I found a screen that made me invisible. In Mecca you can see many women kissing locks without keys. It's like the Kekak dance in Bali. Everyone in the Sacred Spring Temple of Mount Kawei does not know why the conductive body dances and falls down like a fish-scale armor. 23 minutes, 33 minutes, strange tattoos on the Brazilian Kayabu tribe.
If you turn off the subtitles and watch it, you don't even care about where it is in the world. It's a completely different experience.
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The white cemeteries in Ecuador are no different from those in large Indonesian cities. Full of dangdang, airtight. It seems that both the living and the dead are plagued by high-density space.
However, a tantric monk from Koyasan can not be disturbed. He walked through the crowds of people in Shinjuku, Tokyo. That is another kind of life completely, it has nothing to do with impetuous pretense, one's heart is completely inward. We saw his mouth chanting, and we couldn't see his eyes covered by the hat.
The biggest gain recently is the understanding of the Kekak Monkey Dance in Bali. Kecak is actually imitating the voices of monkeys, check, check, check-a chorus of men. The story is based on the love story between Rama and the princess in the Ramayana.
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