Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Impression Nepal (4)
Impression Nepal (4)
Today, I began to feel a little sick! When eating, I don't want to eat anything when I see it I'm fed up with a piece of fried potato. Things like green vegetables and white rice can make people feel sick and vomit! This is the first local meal in Nepal. I haven't been able to do as the Romans do.
At the entrance of the restaurant, the beautiful woman points red on the guest's forehead to show good luck. I made a bad habit. I don't know what's on me. When I walked out of the restaurant, I wiped it in a hurry, leaving the customs and people's goodwill in my heart.
I checked into the Golf Hotel in Kathmandu today. I stayed too late to see the surrounding environment clearly, but the room conditions were the best in recent days. Hotel facilities in Nepal are relatively old. Even the five-star hotels or the best hotels in the area don't have hair dryers or basic facilities. In two hotels on the mountain, geckos or something will sneak into the room at any time and want to bring a companion with us. Sister Ruth misses yesterday's fishtail hotel, which is located in the middle of Feiwa Lake. We wandered around the hotel garden and photographed all kinds of blooming flowers. At night, you can hear all kinds of insects and birds singing, which is close at hand. So afraid to turn off the lights, sleeping until midnight, I will feel nervously that something has touched my feet exposed outside the quilt. When I woke up, I saw nothing! Even so, we still remember! When we were boating on Feiwa Lake and wanted to stroll around the lake in the morning, God gave us another nourishment, and it rained heavily! I remember sitting on the boat and watching raindrops splash on the lake. It was a scene I had never noticed before, with the atmosphere and taste of Children's Day. It was a childlike moment!
Sometimes mistakes create another opportunity. In order to get the glasses that I left in the shop to watch the sunrise yesterday, I saw the fish tail peak again in the morning, which was clearer than yesterday. Finally, corresponding to all the photos I have seen before, the shooting angles are different and the weather conditions are different. "I have been where you have been", which is very romantic, dear friends!
After sitting for a long time, the driver's master is really hard! In that kind of road, I say responsibly, passengers have no choice but to sleep to relieve tension and discomfort. The dust raised all the way covered the whole body, and my throat and nose were a little messy. Those who don't have rhinitis are really "strong noses"!
Back in Kathmandu, the tour guide Ah Jin has a jewelry store, and Ying Zijie talks to him about purchasing and crowdfunding. I can feel that this information has nothing to do with him at the moment, and that kind of indifference is beyond our reach in the domestic environment!
Today, there is only one scenic spot, the Monkey Temple, where Buddhists make a pilgrimage. Akin said that each of us can become a Buddha, so we should practice every day, don't say what we can't say, and don't do what we shouldn't do. This is practicing Buddhism! There are 365 stone steps at the main entrance of Monkey Temple. Nepalese people come up from this stone step every day to worship Buddha, and then return by the same way. 365 stone steps also means 365 days a year, every day. Nepalese have religious beliefs, with Hinduism and Buddhism the most. They get up early every day to worship in the temple, and then spend the day. Ah Jin, a Buddhist, has a Buddhist temple at home. He said that every Nepalese family will have a Buddhist temple and a special room for Buddha worship. These days' work, I don't know how he completed the pilgrimage, but today at the Monkey Temple, I saw his natural piety! When he returns to Kathmandu, he can go back to his home, and I can feel his desire to go home.
Nepalese don't eat beef. Every time we share snacks with Ah Jin, he always asks, "No beef!" ! Today, he told us the reason why we don't eat beef: Nepalese believe that we would drink milk when we were young, that is, cows raised us like mothers, so Nepalese don't eat beef. If you kill a cow, the crime is equivalent to killing! Some reasons are very simple, and norms and taboos are between one thought. The most valuable character of a person is to know his own boundaries and be self-disciplined.
Tomorrow is the penultimate day of the trip.
I wish you, my dear, childlike innocence, happiness and peace, and don't worry about trifles …
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