More than once someone has asked me, “You’ve  visited the My Son Sanctuary many times, have you seen the ancient Cham  tower complex has something new?” Surprised and embarrassed, I see the  question is interesting, so I make a decision to visit My Son again to  find something new at the complex. 
One afternoon, under the influence of the question,  I came to My Son, which is more thoughtful, older, more secreted and  more mysterious than ever.
At the time, there was a tourist group from Japan  who were enchanted to the point of being motionless and silent by the  legendary space at the tower worshipping the goddess Ganesa.  Passionately contemplating the towers sinking down to the darkness, they  accidentally missed the moment of harmony between day and night in My  Son.
This time, I recognized a newer My Son. Moreover,  in the moments between sunset and night, the entire valley was swept by  soft breezes and gentle light as the steps of a goddess drifting away.  Another time I visited My Son at night. Under the moonlight, the towers  seem to be more illusory yet more striking in the darkness. Separated  towers seem to join together with groups of towers. At night, there  seems to be no limit of space.
The valley looks like an installation work of art,  somewhere ordered, somewhere ridiculous, somewhere modern and somewhere  primitive. The moonlight makes everything look closer and more solemn.
One morning I woke up with My Son under the  glistening and cozy sunlight shining on the legendary valley. The  shadows of the towers stretch down and pile up on each other, covering  the mossy black rocks. In the morning, My Son looks younger in its  tranquility.
The My Son Sanctuary, located in the central  province of Quang Nam, is famous as a complex of religious monuments of  the Cham people. The Chams erected these monumental towers of baked  brick and sandstone on square or rectangular foundations. The base  represents the world of humans, the tower body represents the world of  spirits and the tower head (typically lotus shaped) the realm between  the two worlds.
The builders of My Son derived their cultural and  spiritual influences almost exclusively from India in the form of the  trinity of Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. Shiva was the central figure of  worship whose images abound among what remains of the Cham monuments.
The site has been recognized as a  UNESCO World  Heritage.
 

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