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_berma

underscore berma.

Toronto format DJ, open format creative.
@release.to@homeandaway.wav • scarborough •🇳🇵
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Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago


Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago


Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago


Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Chitwan (415m) → Butwal (150m) → Lumbini (150m) | the tropical terai

Not every day high up high up mountains, some days it’s tropical plains too lol. Chitwan feels surreal. You reach Sauraha and suddenly you’re seeing animals you thought only existed in zoos or The Lion King: regal elephants, stoic rhinos, crocodiles patrolling the water.

There’s something absurd about being on the back of an elephant while watching rhinos just… exist. The people of Chitwan are proud of their connection to these protective spirits (their cricket team is literally the Chitwan Rhinos), but the heat here is different. The Nepali sun feels unfiltered, it slaps your face with no warning. I was new to this whole tropical plains thing known as the Terai region.

After a rickshaw ride, a Scooby-Doo looking local bus, and a long drive through the plains, we reached Lumbini, the birthplace of Lord Buddha.

I’ve never seen two religions coexist like they do in Nepal. At mandirs you might find a Buddha statue and at stupas you might see a small Ganesh shrine tucked in the corner. Buddhists celebrating Dashain and Tihar with everyone else. I’ve never been religious, but standing at the ground zero of a religion makes you understand the devotion people carry and the caretakers preserving monuments older than countries, refusing to let their culture fade.

Yes, Nepal is a “poor” country, the reminders are everywhere. I’m not here to defend its flaws. But this is a nation that was never colonized, squeezed between two superpowers yet stands firm in its identity.

My lineage runs through all of this - the language of my forefathers, the gods my ancestors prayed to, the food they grew, even the same moon they looked at. There are countries that would give up their whole gold reserves to have what we have. 🇳🇵🇳🇵🇳🇵


282
13
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago


Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Pokhara (822m) → Marpha (2,670m) → Jomsom (2,750m) | “journey to the Himal”

I swear I’ve never experienced anything like this journey. To even get here, you’ve gotta drive on roads so close to the edge of a cliff it feels like someone sneezing in the car could tip you over. You finally make it to Pokhara and start to understand just how diverse the lands of Nepal really are.

Then comes the journey into Lower Mustang (a place higher than three CN Towers stacked, btw) and you realize you’re stepping into an ancient world. You watch as mountains blend into clouds and the hills you looked up at start to look like small mounds.

Some of these rock formations are as old as the Earth itself. Corners tucked beneath the cliffs probably get four hours of sunlight on a super blessed day. You drive higher and higher, the air gets thinner and thinner, and even the basics leave you breathless, in more ways than one. (Shoutout my lungs for working OT)

From a temple at the bottom of a cave, to an apple orchard at 2,500m, to a Himalayan mountain desert at 2,750m… my eyes have been blessed to see a lot, but there’s something humbling about journeying into the Himalayas and realizing these mountains are the closest the moon will ever get to holding hands with the Earth.


485
22
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Kathmandu Valley🇳🇵- “the pahad” - 1400m elevation

How do I even summarize my time in Kathmandu Valley? Landing during the holy month felt like stepping into a different world - Mandirs glowing in the distance, stupas tucked into every corner, bustling streets full of hustlers, and the hills wrapping the valley like an embrace. Kathmandu, you are one of a kind.

crows cawing, sun beaming, family dinners until you’re a human momo, playing cards, taking care of each other and repeat. you don’t notice you’re falling in love with the valley until you’re in the cycle.

Coming back to the same places my parents left in search of “better days,” only to have some of my best - it really feels like a paradox. Maybe that’s what the immigrant story is.

KTM isn’t perfect but it’s somewhere I can genuinely call home.


423
26
5 months ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Come for Taste of Little Italy, stay for the vibes after❤️‍🔥

Friday, June 12th
A Night With Audiotoks & Friends • 10PM - Late
Last Call Cocktail Club @lastcallcocktailclub | 584 College St.

Sounds by @audiotoks@42mtp@_berma

Free RSVP, Tickets + Table Reservations available via @posh.vip | Link in Bio

Shisha available - cash only

📸 @ry.ones


246
7
1 days ago

Welcome to the Lost In Rotation: Summer Sessions where we took over Studio Apt. Sea for a night and put together an incredible DJ showcase.

First up, we have our local audio vigilante @bbruce.paynee who takes you across his spectrum of sounds.

Be sure to stay tapped in for the next episodes in the series! link in bio 🔗


3
21
5 days ago

‘s bringing back the BASEMENT JAM for part 3️⃣ Next Saturday , May 9th in my basement. 💿⏮️

real JAM vibes by @monagallissound , @dj.dimes6 @_berma @tremollie and @kicksthedj1

IYKYK

🎟️ link in bio


1.3K
102
3 weeks ago

‘s bringing back the BASEMENT JAM for part 3️⃣ Next Saturday , May 9th in my basement. 💿⏮️

real JAM vibes by @monagallissound , @dj.dimes6 @_berma @tremollie and @kicksthedj1

IYKYK

🎟️ link in bio


1.3K
102
3 weeks ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

tabarnak!


3
12
1 months ago

“you wanna heal, you gotta feel quicker”

A classic Roots song mixed with some Odeal and Leon Thomas, one of my recent faves in the vault.

Now on streaming on soundcloud 🗣️


239
62
1 months ago

Where to be on Easter Friday. 📍
A very special episode of Turtles in Colour: Toronto.
We’re back in our favourite city to bring you all feels.
Pull up to @mahjongbar to kick start your long weekend with the turtles and come out your shell for the night.
DJ sets: @_berma @dualehoke @sudaneeyaa & @bkplvg


255
29
1 months ago

Where to be on Easter Friday. 📍
A very special episode of Turtles in Colour: Toronto.
We’re back in our favourite city to bring you all feels.
Pull up to @mahjongbar to kick start your long weekend with the turtles and come out your shell for the night.
DJ sets: @_berma @dualehoke @sudaneeyaa & @bkplvg


255
29
1 months ago

Where to be on Easter Friday. 📍
A very special episode of Turtles in Colour: Toronto.
We’re back in our favourite city to bring you all feels.
Pull up to @mahjongbar to kick start your long weekend with the turtles and come out your shell for the night.
DJ sets: @_berma @dualehoke @sudaneeyaa & @bkplvg


255
29
1 months ago

Where to be on Easter Friday. 📍
A very special episode of Turtles in Colour: Toronto.
We’re back in our favourite city to bring you all feels.
Pull up to @mahjongbar to kick start your long weekend with the turtles and come out your shell for the night.
DJ sets: @_berma @dualehoke @sudaneeyaa & @bkplvg


255
29
1 months ago

Where to be on Easter Friday. 📍
A very special episode of Turtles in Colour: Toronto.
We’re back in our favourite city to bring you all feels.
Pull up to @mahjongbar to kick start your long weekend with the turtles and come out your shell for the night.
DJ sets: @_berma @dualehoke @sudaneeyaa & @bkplvg


255
29
1 months ago

Where to be on Easter Friday. 📍
A very special episode of Turtles in Colour: Toronto.
We’re back in our favourite city to bring you all feels.
Pull up to @mahjongbar to kick start your long weekend with the turtles and come out your shell for the night.
DJ sets: @_berma @dualehoke @sudaneeyaa & @bkplvg


255
29
1 months ago

✨ Nepali New Year Eve Party ✨
Get ready for an electrifying night as Jay Author takes the stage alongside DJ Berma to bring you an unforgettable DJ night experience!
🕙 Time: 10:00 PM – 2:00 AM
🎶 Vibes: High-energy music, non-stop beats, and unforgettable moments
Join us for a night filled with great music, amazing energy, and memories you won’t want to miss. If you’re ready to celebrate the New Year in style, this is the place to be!
🎉 Don’t miss out – let’s make it a night to remember!
#nepaleseincanada🇨🇦 #torontoevent #partynight #karmaeventsca #rnbhiphop


110
6
2 months ago

can’t spell gengar without the gang 😈


219
13
2 months ago

can’t spell gengar without the gang 😈


219
13
2 months ago

can’t spell gengar without the gang 😈


219
13
2 months ago

Built by the city, for the city. On February 27, we return to @lastcallcocktailclub to celebrate the selectors that shape the sounds of Toronto, and the movement that keeps the city in motion.

With:
Sounds by @_berma @manalaang — and for the first time at RELEASE, @prodbymrii 🎧

+ hosted by cultural, sport, fashion storyteller @sydmrey 🌟

We’re gearing up for a landmark year for the city + global moments, so we’re kicking off with a jersey party to put on for the places and teams we love. Come rep your favourites — or if you’re team Release, hold it down in your Release tees.

We’re glad to be back and can’t wait to see you.Link in bio for tickets 🎟️


3
28
3 months ago


Секретный просмотр Историй Instagram

Просмотрщик Историй Instagram — это удобный инструмент, который позволяет вам тайно смотреть и сохранять Истории Instagram, видео, фотографии или IGTV. С помощью этого сервиса вы можете скачать контент и наслаждаться им в оффлайн-режиме в любое время. Если вы нашли что-то интересное в Instagram, что хотите посмотреть позже или хотите просматривать Истории, оставаясь анонимным, наш инструмент — именно то, что вам нужно. Anonstories предлагает отличное решение для скрытия вашей личности. Instagram запустил функцию Stories в августе 2023 года, и она быстро стала популярной на других платформах благодаря захватывающему формату с временными ограничениями. Истории позволяют пользователям делиться быстрыми обновлениями: фото, видео или селфи, дополненными текстом, эмодзи или фильтрами, и доступны только в течение 24 часов. Это ограниченное время создает высокий уровень вовлеченности по сравнению с обычными постами. В современном мире Истории — один из самых популярных способов общения и связи в социальных сетях. Однако, когда вы смотрите Историю, создатель видит ваше имя в списке зрителей, что может быть проблемой с точки зрения конфиденциальности. Что если вы хотите просматривать Истории, не будучи замеченным? Вот где Anonstories окажется полезным. Он позволяет вам смотреть публичный контент Instagram, не раскрывая вашу личность. Просто введите имя пользователя профиля, который вас интересует, и инструмент покажет его последние Истории. Особенности Просмотрщика Anonstories: - Анонимный просмотр: смотрите Истории без отображения в списке зрителей. - Нет необходимости в аккаунте: смотрите публичный контент без регистрации в Instagram. - Скачивание контента: сохраняйте любые Истории прямо на устройство для оффлайн-просмотра. - Просмотр Хайлайтов: получайте доступ к Хайлайтам Instagram, даже после 24 часов. - Мониторинг репостов: отслеживайте репосты или уровень вовлеченности на Историях для личных профилей. Ограничения: - Инструмент работает только с публичными аккаунтами; закрытые аккаунты остаются недоступными. Преимущества: - Защита конфиденциальности: смотрите любой контент в Instagram, не будучи замеченным. - Простой и удобный: не нужно устанавливать приложение или регистрироваться. - Эксклюзивные инструменты: скачивайте и управляйте контентом в способах, которые Instagram не предлагает.

Преимущества Anonstories

Просматривайте Истории IG анонимно

Следите за обновлениями в Instagram скрытно, защищая свою конфиденциальность и оставаясь анонимным.


Приватный просмотр Instagram

Смотрите профили и фотографии анонимно с помощью Приватного Просмотрщика профилей.


Бесплатный просмотр Историй

Этот бесплатный инструмент позволяет вам анонимно просматривать Истории в Instagram, гарантируя, что ваша активность останется скрытой от загрузившего Историю.

Часто задаваемые вопросы

 
Анонимность

Anonstories позволяет пользователям просматривать Истории Instagram, не уведомляя создателя.

 
Совместимость с устройствами

Работает без проблем на iOS, Android, Windows, macOS и современных браузерах, таких как Chrome и Safari.

 
Безопасность и конфиденциальность

Приоритет на безопасный, анонимный просмотр без необходимости ввода учетных данных.

 
Нет регистрации

Пользователи могут просматривать публичные Истории, просто вводя имя пользователя — без регистрации.

 
Поддерживаемые форматы

Легко скачивайте фотографии (JPEG) и видео (MP4).

 
Стоимость

Сервис бесплатен для использования.

 
Приватные аккаунты

Контент с приватных аккаунтов доступен только для подписчиков.

 
Использование файлов

Файлы предназначены только для личного или образовательного использования и должны соответствовать правилам авторского права.

 
Как это работает

Введите публичное имя пользователя для просмотра или скачивания Историй. Сервис генерирует прямые ссылки для сохранения контента на ваше устройство.