@malfeitona Ja tive o mesmo terapeuta que a minha melhor amiga, parecia que fazíamos terapia com pessoas completamente diferentes. O processo foi ótimo
An illustration of what the text refers to as “The Primordial Egg. Chinese Emblem of the Ten Potencies, four ethereal (wings), six mundane (feet)” from Intelligence v.7:no.1 (1897).
The Minotaur is not a monster but a sacred figure, the divine child, the initiatory bull-god, the embodiment of apotheosis through ordeal. The labyrinth was not a prison but a temple. Within its winding paths initiates confronted the divine in its animal form.
In "Animated Sculptures of the Crucified Christ in the Religious Culture of the Latin Middle Ages," Kamil Kopania examines a largely forgotten class of medieval devotional objects: crucifixes with movable arms, heads, eyes, mouths, tongues, and mechanisms for bleeding.
Robert Kurvitz's upcoming project, Corinthians, had it's first concept art leak, as shown below. Depicting one of the main areas of the map, this image suggests that the name "Corinthians" was not a coincidence after all, and that the game will be set in Osasco - São Paulo.
gonna wrap up the religious cultural jokes thing here with a personal favorite. not exactly a joke but a lot of zen stuff is joke-esque.
there’s a buddhist master teaching his students. he starts a new line of questioning: every day, he sits them in a circle, and asks each one, “what is the essence of buddha nature?”. one student says: “spontaneous liberation”. “just words”, says the master. “awareness knowing itself”. no, says the master. every day, each student gives a new answer, and the master dismisses them all.
one student has been watching all this. he wants to impress the master with his insight. so he goes down to the lake, gets a frog, and hides the frog in his sleeve. then, he goes to sit in the circle for questioning.
the master comes to him, and asks “what is the essence of buddha nature?”. the student produces the frog from his sleeve, and presents it in his hand. “no,” says the master: “too intellectual”.