This is the scene where a young Sayuri is running through the torii gates at Fushimi Inari |
Main Gate at Fushimi Inari |
When I visited it was a perfect day sunny and cool like the autumn weather back home. And I can say that from the moment we arrived to Fushimi Inari station it was like stepping back in time. Almost every temple I've visited thus far has had this aura of the past but in Fushimi Inari the air was different.
The 狐 (fox) messengers of Inari |
Maybe it was the size, the small stolen glances of the Miko and priests between the shrine doors, a quick flash of a red hakama, or the distant echo of a Buddhist chant, or the snarling faces of a hundred foxes jaws lulling open. Or perhaps it was it's utter foreignness to me, not only in language but in customs, practices, and religion. Everything was tainted by my distance with an air of mystery.
As we climbed the orange torii gates wound up the side of the mountain and
the light seeping in from the gaps made it seem like I was walking in the fiery
belly of an old and giant snake. The
whole way up an underlying tranquility pervaded everything and in its infectious
and almost jarring nature I found myself stopping and attempting to cast out my
senses. Running fingers over the cold stone of shrines, the shined and sometimes splintered wood of the gates,
hearing the dull gong and high twinkle of temple bells, and breathing in deep
the heady mixture of temple incense and mountain air. It seemed like we were all propelled forward,
old and young, singular and in groups. Feet moving of their own accord, stair
after stair in a destination-less procession up the mountain.
Small individual shrines sat in clusters on the edge of the main trail, like villages for the tiny foxes that guarded them. At times when I was snapping pictures it almost felt like they were watching me, hungry with their open mouths and tiny snake silted eyes. Waiting to gobble up offerings and prayers and in return grant prosperity.
And as I reached the top and saw the last shrine surrounded by a hundred mirrored miniatures, I felt a near chill. Like I had walked into to an abandoned city, undisturbed and uninvited. Still, I felt draw there, drawn to put a hundred yen coin in the mouth of the kitsune and grab for myself a piece of good fortune. Climbing the steps of Fushimi Inari one realizes what it takes to receive prosperity, repetition, motivation and an audacity to disturb something in yourself that you never have before.
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