Oct 4, 2001 • by Andrey Cherkasov, Sergey Izrigi

Water Bodies and the Church

Original Source ↗

Question regarding transits: Can it be a place, not an object?

It happened to me that I was walking upstream along a stream, then began to climb the small waterfalls created by this stream, and came out to a gorge with sand walls – a narrow quarry. When I passed through it, I found myself in a square in front of a church. That is, this quarry served as a transition from one dream plot to another.

Such water bodies on my map are located precisely to the north of the City. Sometimes they are a series of small lakes, sometimes dried-up basins. When they dry up, I use them for transit into the first Lower World. It's enough to find cracks on the slopes of the dried-up water bodies and "draw yourself" into them. So check whether your "church" is actually a church, or if it's a checkpoint into the first Lower World. The difference is that the inhabitants of the Lower World are very ceremonial and terribly fond of trading or exchanging. A transit can be both an object and a place. For example, a door. It's kind of an object... and at the same time, a place.

Follow-up from Questioner: I didn't pay attention to this, as I didn't attach any significance to it. In the "church", there were many tables from which icons and paintings were traded.