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Are You Looking for a Sacred Place? This is as Near to One as I know of!

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
r620-36565640c29a51a4e81716947c266efb.jpg


  • Do you ever feel a spiritual connection with nature?
  • Are you curious enough to see if you could?
  • Do you enjoy visiting unique, one of a kind, places?
  • Are you attracted to relatively undeveloped, rustic resorts?
  • Can you accept the possibility of experiencing some of North America's largest wild animals peacefully grazing within a stone's throw of you? (Caution! Actually throwing stones at a thousand pound elk? NOT recommended!)

If so, take notice! I've spoken of this place before in threads on RF, but a recent event recalled my attention to it. First, though, I'll tell you what it is not:

1) It is not the most beautiful place in all of Colorado. There are many other more beautiful places.

2) It is not easily accessible. It's a three and a half hour drive from Colorado Springs and a bit longer drive from the Denver International Airport.

3) And it is anything but "touristy". If you adore stylish "I love Colorado" T-shirts, and cute little figurines of bears pooping in the woods, this most likely will not become your favorite haunt.​

That's what it's not.

Here's what it is. Valley View Hot Springs is a remote resort perched on the side of a mountain. It overlooks the world's largest inter-mountain valley. The 100 mile long, thinly populated, San Luis, which -- according to Wikipedia -- is the home of at least 500 working artists. The nearest town to the resort itself, Alamosa (population under 10,000) is over 25 miles away. Even on a dark night, Alamosa is no more than a dim glow on the horizon. All of which puts the Hot Springs "in the middle of nowhere".

There are nine soaking pools at various locations up and down the mountainside, most of them natural, each of them unique, and each roughly around body temperature. There's also a lovely sauna and a few other nice amenities.

But Valley View's real claim to being special is this: People treat Valley View as if it were spiritually sacred.

Of course, not everyone. But I've been there several times, and depending on the trip, one-quarter to fully one-half of the guests were speaking in whispers, just as if they felt they were in a cathedral. People almost routinely describe it as "sacred". Even those who do not themselves feel the sacredness of Valley View tend to respect those who do.

Frankly, I have no idea why so many people feel it as sacred. It's beautiful, but -- like I said -- not the most beautiful place. You look out over the valley from the mountain and are impressed by the view, but you are not likely to feel awe at its beauty. I have been to more beautiful places where people have spoken in anything but whispers. Gorgeous places visited annually by thousands, and no one has ever said to me those places feel sacred. Yet, I can no longer count the number of people who have said Valley View is sacred. Whatever it has, it has something that is virtually unique.

Maybe it's the animals? You can almost expect to find wild black tail deer, elk, or even the occasional moose come down from the mountain to graze within thirty or forty feet of you. You could even sight a black bear. In the evenings, you can expect to hear -- but most likely not see -- a chorus of coyotes. Overhead, hawks and eagles sometimes pass by. But I myself don't think it's just the animals, nor even the generally undeveloped nature of the resort.

The closest I have come to explaining why Valley View is held sacred by so many people is that it's clothing optional. At Valley View, no one will ever object to your going without clothing, and no one will ever object to your wearing clothing.

Now, if you know nothing at all about nudists and naturists, know this: Contrary to myth, they are NOT generally motivated by an egotistical desire to show off their bodies. Nor are they hyper-sexual individuals titillated by the sight of mere nudity. If you've heard either of those myths about them, you've been mislead.

It is much more truthful to say they simply enjoy going without clothing. Some folks are like that.

But how does all that translate into holding a place sacred?

Well, nudists and naturalists tend to be among the most tolerant and accepting people you'll ever meet. A friend of mine, a Christian pastor, once told me that she and her husband had just gotten home from going to a nudist resort for the first time in either of their lives. "I was astounded, Phil, by how accepting everyone was of each other. They were actually practicing 'Christian Love, and practicing it better than my congregation does on a Sunday!"

So I think it might be that sense of being accepted just as you are -- warts and all -- that causes so many people to hold Valley View spiritually sacred.

On a moonless night, the San Luis Valley explodes -- with stars. There's no better word for it than "explodes". I can all but guarantee that if you live in a city, you will most likely have forgotten how many stars can be seen in a non-urban sky. The Milky Way is clearly visible, and the coyotes don't quit calling until well into the night. If you gaze straight up, you might even experience the eerie feeling of being in imminent danger of falling upwards into infinity.

Yet, even despite the "noisy" coyotes, the valley is quiet. There is a certain quality of sound there that perhaps only rural people are quite familiar with. Sounds seem peculiarly discrete, as if each noise is wrapped in a cushion of silence. You can hear your thoughts there. The buzz of a single passing fly will leap out at you. You'll notice things you usually don't notice.

If you've ever wanted to experience a spiritual connection to nature, this might be the place to do it.

Nearby is the Great Sand Dunes National Park. Although not officially clothing optional, the Park is still in Colorado, right? Some folks go nude there, too. Far to the South is Santa Fe and Taos, New Mexico. About a six or seven hour drive.

To the North is the real South Park, which has been made famous by the cartoon show. Nearby, Salida is a small town known for art galleries and whitewater rafting. People who have houses on the river there tell me they wake up in the mornings to watch eagles fishing.

And, of course, further North are the dangerous Colorado ski resort towns just waiting for any fool reckless enough to plumet down a mountain slope lashed to mere sticks and without the sane comfort and safety of being attached to climbing ropes. Sheesh! I tell you, such an unlikely "sport" will never catch on. Stick to climbing 200 foot cliffs. It's safer! Just when was the last time you ever heard of someone crashing into a tree at 90 miles an hour while climbing up a mountain? Huh? Stay safe. Climb cliffs!

Valley View Hot Springs
64393 County Road GG, Moffat, CO 81143

(719) 256-4315

A couple necessary disclaimers: My information may be dated. I haven't myself been there in at least six years. But the place is still under the same management, so I doubt it's changed much. Last, the notion Valley View is sacred soil apparently belongs at most to just half the people who visit there. The rest just like the place.
 

Stanyon

WWMRD?
You are just trying to trick RFers into going there so you can look at them naked aren't you?
 
Last edited:

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
You are just trying to trick RFers into go there so you can look at them naked aren't you?

I confess! You've got my number, But only @Rival. I'm hoping she goes there and is finally and at last inspired to email me some nude selfies! A long shot, I know. But I've already tried everything else!
 

Terese

Mangalam Pundarikakshah
Staff member
Premium Member
That sounds like a lovely place! I admit, the idea of going naked in front of people is more than a little revealing, but i think i have the tenacity to embrace it. There is a sort of freedom when one is naked outside.

What season is best to visit this sacred hot spring? How does the daytime compare to the night? It sounds gorgeous to see it at night from your description. I love viewing the cosmos and its stars. That is a pastime i find quite freeing also.

Naked+Cosmos viewing = a visit from Terese :D
 

Unveiled Artist

Veteran Member
View attachment 21914

  • Do you ever feel a spiritual connection with nature?
  • Are you curious enough to see if you could?
  • Do you enjoy visiting unique, one of a kind, places?
  • Are you attracted to relatively undeveloped, rustic resorts?
  • Can you accept the possibility of experiencing some of North America's largest wild animals peacefully grazing within a stone's throw of you? (Caution! Actually throwing stones at a thousand pound elk NOT recommended!)

If so, take notice! I've spoken of this place before in threads on RF, but a recent event recalled my attention to it. First, though, I'll tell you what it is not:

1) It is not the most beautiful place in all of Colorado. There are many other more beautiful places.

2) It is not easily accessible. It's a three and a half hour drive from Colorado Springs and a bit longer drive from the Denver International Airport.

3) And it is anything but "touristy". If you adore stylish "I love Colorado" T-shirts, and cute little figurines of bears pooping in the woods, this most likely will not become your favorite haunt.​

That's what it's not.

Here's what it is. Valley View Hot Springs is a remote resort perched on the side of a mountain. It overlooks the world's largest inter-mountain valley. The 100 mile long, thinly populated, San Luis, which -- according to Wikipedia -- is the home of at least 500 working artists. The nearest town to the resort itself, Alamosa (population under 10,000) is over 25 miles away. Even on a dark night, Alamosa is no more than a dim glow on the horizon. All of which puts the Hot Springs "in the middle of nowhere".

But its real claim to being special is this: People treat Valley View as if it were spiritually sacred.

Of course, not everyone. But I've been there several times, and depending on the trip, one-quarter to fully one-half of the guests were speaking in whispers, just as if they felt they were in a cathedral. People almost routinely describe it as "sacred". Even those who do not themselves feel the sacredness of Valley View tend to respect those who do.

Frankly, I have no idea why that is so. It's beautiful, but -- like I said -- not the most beautiful place. You look out over the valley from the mountain and are impressed by the view, but you are not likely to feel awe at its beauty. I have been to more beautiful places where people have spoken in anything but whispers. Gorgeous places visited annually by thousands, and no one has ever said to me those places feel sacred. Yet, I can no longer count the number of people who have said Valley View is sacred. Whatever it has, it has something that is virtually unique.

Maybe it's the animals? You can almost expect to find wild black tail deer, elk, or even the occasional moose come down from the mountain to graze within thirty or forty feet of you. You could even sight a black bear. In the evenings, you can expect to hear -- but most likely not see -- a chorus of coyotes. Overhead, hawks and eagles sometimes pass by. But I myself don't think it's just the animals, nor even the generally undeveloped nature of the resort.

The closest I have come to explaining why Valley View is held sacred by so many people is that it's clothing optional. At Valley View, no one will ever object to your going without clothing, and no one will ever object to your wearing clothing.

Now, if you know nothing at all about nudists and naturists, know this: Contrary to myth, they are NOT generally motivated by an egotistical desire to show off their bodies. Nor are they hyper-sexual individuals titillated by the sight of mere nudity. If you've heard either of those myths about them, you've been mislead.

It is much more truthful to say they simply enjoy going without clothing. Some folks are like that.

But how does all that translate into holding a place sacred?

Well, nudists and naturalists tend to be among the most tolerant and accepting people you'll ever meet. A friend of mine, a Christian pastor, once told me that she and her husband had just gotten home from going to a nudist resort for the first time in either of their lives. "I was astounded, Phil, by how accepting everyone was of each other. They were actually practicing 'Christian Love, and practicing it better than my congregation does on a Sunday!"

So I think it might be that sense of being accepted just as you are -- warts and all -- that causes so many people to hold Valley View spiritually sacred.

On a moonless night, the San Luis Valley explodes -- with stars. There's no better word for it than "explodes". I can all but guarantee that if you live in a city, you will most likely have forgotten how many stars can be seen in a non-urban sky. The Milky Way is clearly visible, and the coyotes don't quit calling until well into the night. If you gaze straight up, you might even experience the eerie feeling of being in imminent danger of falling up into infinity.

Yet, even despite the "noisy" coyotes, the valley is quiet. There is a certain quality of sound there that perhaps only rural people are quite familiar with. Sounds seem peculiarly discrete, as if each noise is wrapped in a cushion of silence. You can hear your thoughts there. The buzz of a single passing fly will leap out at you. You'll notice things you usually don't notice.

If you've ever wanted to experience a spiritual connection to nature, this might be the place to do it.

Nearby is the Great Sand Dunes National Park. Although not officially clothing optional, the Park is still in Colorado, right? Some folks go nude there, too. Far to the South is Santa Fe and Taos, New Mexico. To the North is the real South Park, which has been made famous by the cartoon show. Nearby Salida, Colorado is a small town known for it art galleries and whitewater rafting. And, of course, further North are the famous Colorado ski resorts waiting for any fool daring enough to speed down a mountain slope on mere sticks and without the sane comfort and safety of being attached to mountain climbing ropes. Sheesh! Such a sport will never catch on, I tell you! Stick to climbing!

Valley View Hot Springs
64393 County Road GG, Moffat, CO 81143

(719) 256-4315

One necessary disclaimer: My information may be dated. I haven't myself been there in at least six years. But the place is still under the same management, so I doubt it's changed much.

Unless there's traffic signals and high tower buildings, its all sacred to me.
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
What season is best to visit this sacred hot spring?

Remember, only about a quarter to half of the people who go there seem to have a pronounced feeling that the place is sacred, but almost everyone seems to appreciate the place in their own ways. Having said that...

Spring and Fall, just before or just after the busiest season.

When I first started going there, the resort had existed for years, but "clothing optional" didn't appeal to a lot of people, so you could easy find it uncrowded in the summer during the week, and only full up on the weekends. That's changed a bit. The best times to go have always, in my opinion, been Spring and Fall, but now it's even better to go during those seasons so as to avoid a "crowd" (meaning more than about two dozen people).

The San Luis has an average elevation of over 2000 meters, meaning it gets a bit cool at night, even in the summer. So bring jackets and blankets in the Spring and Fall especially. Just so you know, it's exquisite fun to sit under a blanket next to someone, nude skins close even if not touching, in the high mountain chill of the night and brag about sexual exploits.

Of course, in the Spring the land is fresh with greens, and in the fall, the leaves turn (mostly vibrant yellows).

Also bear in mind that Valley View is a family resort. You can see people of all ages there.

How does the daytime compare to the night?

In terms of the sacred feeling so many people experience? I don't think there's much real difference at all. However, unless you are simply pressed for time, don't do a mere day trip. Stay for at least three or four days and nights -- preferably during the week, rather than the weekend.

The first day, the novelty of the place will entertain you.
The second day, you'll be a bit bored because you're not accustomed to the quiet serenity, and your mind will be impatiently looking for drama and excitements, as if you were still back in the city.
The third day, with just a bit of luck, the natural magic of the place will begin to unfold.
The fourth day, you might discover yourself at peace with it all.

It sounds gorgeous to see it at night from your description. I love viewing the cosmos and its stars. That is a pastime i find quite freeing also.

Is that so? You simply won't be able to get enough of Valley View then. I cannot really do the night sky justice. Only a real poet could come close. Even on a full moon night, when maybe only a thousand stars are visible, the landscape is aflame with a pale blue glow -- more pronounced, I reckon, than most anything you'll experience in the city. Shadows become mysteries, and you can feel like your heart will burst from too much beauty. The rattlesnakes will seem to be chanting mystic mantras as they shake their tales at you. And, then, of course, they bite, and you die. Sucks in the end, but -- as the say -- the real trip is in just getting there!

Seriously, I've been on trips with people who couldn't normally be bothered to look at even a beautiful flower for more than a few seconds, and yet who I witnessed stand gazing in rapt silence at the Valley for thirty or forty minutes on a moonlit night, just trying to take it all in.

Naked+Cosmos viewing = a visit from Terese :D

If you come here, I'll take you to Valley View. That's a real promise. And -- just to make sure you're perfectly comfortable -- I won't even ever actually stare at your nude body much.

Truthfully, I've been there with many different people, and I have yet to go there with someone who didn't sooner or later feel comfortable going nude. It seems to come much more natural to us humans than most of us suspect it will.
 

Terese

Mangalam Pundarikakshah
Staff member
Premium Member
Remember, only about a quarter to half of the people who go there seem to have a pronounced feeling that the place is sacred, but almost everyone seems to appreciate the place in their own ways. Having said that...

Spring and Fall, just before or just after the busiest season.

When I first started going there, the resort had existed for years, but "clothing optional" didn't appeal to a lot of people, so you could easy find it uncrowded in the summer during the week, and only full up on the weekends. That's changed a bit. The best times to go have always, in my opinion, been Spring and Fall, but now it's even better to go during those seasons so as to avoid a "crowd" (meaning more than about two dozen people).

The San Luis has an average elevation of over 2000 meters, meaning it gets a bit cool at night, even in the summer. So bring jackets and blankets in the Spring and Fall especially. Just so you know, it's exquisite fun to sit under a blanket next to someone, nude skins close even if not touching, in the high mountain chill of the night and brag about sexual exploits.

Of course, in the Spring the land is fresh with greens, and in the fall, the leaves turn (mostly vibrant yellows).

Also bear in mind that Valley View is a family resort. You can see people of all ages there.



In terms of the sacred feeling so many people experience? I don't think there's much real difference at all. However, unless you are simply pressed for time, don't do a mere day trip. Stay for at least three or four days and nights -- preferably during the week, rather than the weekend.

The first day, the novelty of the place will entertain you.
The second day, you'll be a bit bored because you're not accustomed to the quiet serenity, and your mind will be impatiently looking for drama and excitements, as if you were still back in the city.
The third day, with just a bit of luck, the natural magic of the place will begin to unfold.
The fourth day, you might discover yourself at peace with it all.



Is that so? You simply won't be able to get enough of Valley View then. I cannot really do the night sky justice. Only a real poet could come close. Even on a full moon night, when maybe only a thousand stars are visible, the landscape is aflame with a pale blue glow -- more pronounced, I reckon, than most anything you'll experience in the city. Shadows become mysteries, and you can feel like your heart will burst from too much beauty. The rattlesnakes will seem to be chanting mystic mantras. And, then, of course, they bite, and you die. But you die so happy!

Seriously, I've been on trips with people who couldn't normally be bothered to look at even a beautiful flower for more than a few seconds, and who I witnessed stand gazing in rapt silence at the Valley for thirty or forty minutes on a moonlit night, just trying to take it all in.



If you come here, I'll take you to Valley View. That's a real promise. And -- just to make sure you're perfectly comfortable -- I won't even ever actually stare at your nude body much.

Truthfully, I've been there with many different people, and I have yet to go there with someone who didn't sooner or later feel comfortable going nude. It seems to come much more natural to us humans than most of us suspect it will.
Thanks for all the info! And the free Valley View tour :D

On what day did you realise the "magic" of the resort?
 

Vinayaka

devotee
Premium Member
View attachment 21914

  • Do you ever feel a spiritual connection with nature?
  • Are you curious enough to see if you could?
  • Do you enjoy visiting unique, one of a kind, places?
  • Are you attracted to relatively undeveloped, rustic resorts?
  • Can you accept the possibility of experiencing some of North America's largest wild animals peacefully grazing within a stone's throw of you? (Caution! Actually throwing stones at a thousand pound elk NOT recommended!)

If so, take notice! I've spoken of this place before in threads on RF, but a recent event recalled my attention to it. First, though, I'll tell you what it is not:

Your place is the kind of place we'd go to. Here in Alberta, I know two very isolated medicine wheels on high hills. Nothing but the cows and the stars.

I view this planet as spiritual, holy, but some spots do resonate more than others.
 

icehorse

......unaffiliated...... anti-dogmatist
Premium Member
Been there! I agree, it's sacred. I find much of Colorado to be sacred. In fact I find much of the high desert to be sacred.

Thanks for the memories!
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
On what day did you realise the "magic" of the resort?

On my first trip. One Saturday morning, I phoned my new friend Becky just to see how she was doing. Almost the first words out of her mouth were, "Would you like to go to Valley View with us? I'm leaving with the kids in about an hour." I'd never heard of the place before then, being new in town.

We got there, climbed up the mountainside to the upper pools, and Aaron (7) and Leah (10) split off to play in one of the pools while Becky and I settled down in another. Becky said, "I'm taking my clothes off, you do what you want." So, I thought, "Why not?" and followed her example. Then we soaked for awhile, Becky fell asleep in the pool, but I just lay there in the warm water, awake and listening to the kids laugh and giggle in the next pool over.

Presently, I started to notice things. How the wind through the ponderosa pines sounded like a river. How the sun dappled the moss and pebbles beneath the water. A flying insect a few yards away. The hawk overhead.

Becky was all whispers from the moment we arrived at Valley View. Curious, I asked her why she was whispering. At first she said, "I'm not sure why, it's just that everyone does it." But then she added, "I think there are spirits here."

That sounded crazy to me, of course. Spirits? I'd known Becky for less than a month at that point, and I hadn't come yet to understand what she herself meant when she used terms like "spirits", so I foolishly assumed she only meant some supernatural entity. Later, I learned such terms are to her in large part a kind personal shorthand for things anyone can see or feel. Looking back now, she probably meant something along the lines of the place seemed to her special, a bit magical, or perhaps more likely -- infused her with a sense of peace.

Despite not that day quite understanding Becky, I was soon enough feeling that peace too. Peace is the right word. "Relaxed". "At ease". Those words don't quite capture it as well as "peace" does.

Later, Becky woke up, and after stretching a bit, looked over my shoulder, grinned, put her finger to her lips to shush me, then pointed. I looked, and there behind me were two black tail deer, perhaps twenty five or thirty feet away. They were simply grazing as if no humans were present. Until then, I hadn't seen wild deer come that close to people.

That day, incidentally, it seemed to me that every other person we came across was whispering. Not just Becky. Her two young kids were the loudest voices at the resort! And even they weren't shouting, except for a little bit of semi-hushed shouting when it came time to go.

Becky said, "You take Leah, I'll get Aaron, and we'll go." So I picked up Leah and headed off down the trail to leave. But Aaron didn't want to come out of the pool. So Becky, dressed by now, stood at the edge of the pool trying to coax him out. Leah saw that and jokingly started to encourage Aaron to resist, "You have rights, Aaron! Stand your ground! I'll be your lawyer in court! We'll win!" Then she raised her little fist in a clenched salute to solidarity, and started singing "Born Free! Free as the wind!" But she was no where near at the top of her voice. Even the kids were respecting the "spirits" of the place.
 

icehorse

......unaffiliated...... anti-dogmatist
Premium Member
We moved from Colorado about a decade ago. But I have friends that still visit Valley View and our older daughter, who lives in Durango, goes there several times a year. It really is a special spot.

There are so many special spots in Colorado: Grand Mesa, Wild Basin, Indian Peaks, Crested Butte, Telluride, and on and on...
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
We moved from Colorado about a decade ago. But I have friends that still visit Valley View and our older daughter, who lives in Durango, goes there several times a year. It really is a special spot.

May I ask where you once lived in Colorado? Durango?

There are so many special spots in Colorado: Grand Mesa, Wild Basin, Indian Peaks, Crested Butte, Telluride, and on and on...

I quite agree! This is a beautiful state! A friend of mine grew up in Crested Butte and has instilled in me a special fondness for that small town. She used to pile me into her little sports car to dive up there and visit her brother. He'd tell us stories about the snow being up to his second floor apartment's balcony in the winter! I've never actually seen snow that deep.

I love the wild flowers in the fields around the town!

I'm quite curious. What makes a place sacred to you? Can you explain it, or is it just something you really can't put your finger on? With me, it's something I have a great deal of difficulty articulating.
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
Here in Alberta, I know two very isolated medicine wheels on high hills. Nothing but the cows and the stars.

That almost makes me shiver just to hear of them. Thanks for sharing that!

I view this planet as spiritual, holy, but some spots do resonate more than others.

I love your attitude! I'll ask you the same question I asked Ice Horse, if you don't mind. What makes any place sacred? Is it something you can explain? Or is it beyond that?
 

Skwim

Veteran Member
Ah, yes. Valley View Hot Springs


"Safe, Family-Friendly, Clothing-Optional Naturism

OLT promotes a vibrant, safe, family-oriented naturism. Naturism, or the option to choose whether or not to wear clothing, is a natural, personal choice that is appropriate for people of any age or setting, most especially pristine natural spaces like Valley View Hot Springs. Nudity is simply a state of nature, and at OLT it is promoted in an environment of non-sexual, child and family safety. Naturism allows each of us to be one layer closer to nature, to discover ourselves as we are without the expectations and pressures of the greater culture. There is no shame, no expectation, nothing but the natural state of being."

.
 

sun rise

The world is on fire
Premium Member
People treat Valley View as if it were spiritually sacred.

I live at the foot of a mountain which has native names purported to be “Everywhere Seen” and “Laughing Mountain", "at the dawn of time", or "Spirit Mountain" depending on which internet site you believe. History records that it is named Mount Diablo because of a mistranslation of the Spanish name for the region "Monte del Diablo", thicket of the devil, because the Native Americans were able to escape the Spanish by hiding in the region's thickets. English speakers thought "monte" meant "mountain".

If you're so inclined, you can get lost in various images of what people claim are the Earth's chakras, vortexes and ley lines.

All I can say personally is that I've visited places that have inspired me and felt special even without the nudity.
 

icehorse

......unaffiliated...... anti-dogmatist
Premium Member
May I ask where you once lived in Colorado? Durango?

We lived in and around Boulder, but we spent a lot of time all over the state. Bagging 14ers, skiing, biking, Telluride Bluegrass Festivarian-ing and so on. When I was 3 we lived on top of Grand Mesa - it's stunning. It's like a slice of Canada got shipped down to Co.

I'm quite curious. What makes a place sacred to you? Can you explain it, or is it just something you really can't put your finger on? With me, it's something I have a great deal of difficulty articulating.

I also have difficulty articulating it, but...

It often happens when I'm in awe of a place.
It often happens when a place just puts me in a good mood. (or a GREAT mood.)
Places like this make me feel "at home" and emotionally nourished.
I've been known to weep with joy at such places...
 

Sunstone

De Diablo Del Fora
Premium Member
Places like this make me feel "at home" and emotionally nourished.

Every thing you said about the sacred made sense to me, but that above -- that completely resonated with me. I'm reasonably good with words, but you just now spoke the words I've searched in vain for. Thank you so much!

Incidentally, I get that "at home" feeling, which I also call a feeling of being "centered", when I pick up a brush to paint a portrait or such. But this is the first time I've realized that's the same feeling I have in places I'd describe as "sacred".
 
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