11 Apr 2011

Samsara: A Movie of Deluged Traditions

Along the path heading towards the monastery is a stone-engraved words that literally asked about preventing a waterdrop from drying. Tashi also noticed the encryption.

A magnificent Tibetan tradition was spread in between barren mountains of Jammu and Kashmir of Ladakh. It is nestled at twelve thousand feet over sea level and can be considered a scenic landscape for movie shoots. If Pan Nalin would've known the place while stating the portrayals of the values in Tibetan system anchored on the ideas and teachings of the Buddha, Siddartha Gautama.

Regardless of the system influence during the Chinese invasion in Tibet, Tibetans' morality and values are preserved. It is known all over universe that they are wealthy in cultures and traditions, particularly on human links to nature. The principles of Buddha are well inculcated in their lives every single day. The thoroughfares of Ladakh are full of mantra chanting Tibetans. The prayers will echo around streets.

Ladakh is absolutely the Omnipotent's masterpiece. You can traverse beautiful sceneries amidst sandy highways in Rohtang Pass, approximately 50Km to Manali. The alluring river flows at the other side of the paths can captivate a tiring soul for a bathe. The conveyance left Manali around 2am dawn time. Even with drowsy perception, one will come to appreciate Rohtang Pass' loveliness. But, wait! There are more remarkable encounters as we go further to Ladakh.

The movie Samsara and Ladakh are both awesome. In the movie, Tashi was in the cave for the period of three days, three months, three weeks and three days for meditation. It has been monks' obligation to awake his being with noise from Tibetan bowl for the time has come to return to Samsara or the World. Tashi has gained knowledge on the language and came to retrieve his normal monastic routine and discipline, but only to recognize that his energy on sexuality was not taken directed well. For spiritual candidates, a mastery on sexual urge and huge amount of power over ejaculation and arousal are taught.

Accordingly, the sexual prowess is headed up to the brain and all the cores of the nerve are set in motion. The enormous heat of the semen unbolts up the subconscious mind towards illumination.

Tashi recognized this failure and was troubled on it. Sonam, his trusted friend and room buddy, felt his angst when he saw Tashi's struggle to surpass his wants for sexual pleasure. Apo, the senior monk, is concerned about it and verified Sonam if Tashi has the same wet dreams. Upon knowing that Tashi still has them, he told Tashi to engulf fresh airs and they take their time in an adjacent village to where they are provided with complementary feast. Tashi saw the woman named Pema and he was attracted to the beauty the woman possesses.

Apo noticed everything and kept on convincing Tashi about the path he must follow. In contradiction, Tashi left the monastery and followed his brand new yearning- Pema. They got married and he lives a farmer's life. He lost contacts for years with his spiritual practices. One day, Sonam arrived bearing a letter wrote by Apo. The missive asked about the comparative weighs on satisfaction of numerous Earthly desires and conquering just one.

In its entirety, the plots in the story are well done and it touches many insightful issues like the women's rights for crafting decisions in life. The screenplay, scripts, and direction is above average. Samsara is a good portrayal of life in Ladakh that is uniquely transformed into a movie that everybody will surely love.

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