NEARLY A DECADE AGO my husband, Jason, and I stumbled upon the obituaries of the artist-architects Shusaku Arakawa and Madeline Gins in the New York Times. It was a strange way to learn about a duo whose motto was "we have decided not to die."
The Reversible Destiny Office is the first pavilion visitors encounter at the Site of Reversible Destiny. Upon entering, we were given a set of directions like "Instead of being fearful of losing your balance, look forward to it" and "Try to be more body and less person."
In between pavilions with names like Zone of the Clearest Confusion and Trajectory Membrane Gate, the park's undulating grounds are immaculately kept.
In the Critical Resemblance House, another of the park's pavilions, up becomes down, and walls cleave furniture in half. The floor is a threedimensional map.
In the early 1990s, Arakawa and Gins built a sprawling installation - part theme park, part land art, part philosophy come to life - in Japan's Gifu Prefecture. The Site of Reversible Destiny, as they called it, promises to stave off death by challenging both body and spirit. As soon as we read about it, we knew we had to go.
Yoro Land is a rainbow-colored amusement park in Yoro Park that made our faces hurt from smiling. In addition to rides, there is a fishing pond, a petting zoo with deer and ducks, and an arcade that seems frozen in the mid-80s. (It includes such rare machines as the Sega motorcycle game Hang-On.)
Yoro Falls is a short walk from Takimotokan Yukinosato (doubles from $173), an excellent ryokan. The waterfall was one of the many surprises we encountered at the inn.
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Esta historia es de la edición September 2023 de Travel+Leisure US.
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The Luxury of Silence - Grieving a dissolved marriage, Nora Walsh seeks peace and compassion at a meditation retreat in California.
My decade-long marriage to a man I deeply love had dissolved, and I had come to the Spirit Rock Meditation Center, in the secluded hills of Marin County, north of San Francisco, to steady myself. Led by the author and meditation teacher Oren Jay Sofer, the seven-day silent retreat focused on the four brahmavihāra, or Buddhist virtues: loving-kindness, compassion, joy, and equanimity.
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My partner and I grew up in families that didn't travel a lot, so we've always had a sense of wanderlust. Before we had kids, we traveled together, and it was life-changing-travel opened our minds to different ways of life.In 2000, Triton and I decided to have kids. At the time, my mom had terminal cancer, and we were all about connecting with family. We wanted to adopt, because we felt like there were so many children in the world who needed love and a good home. In 2002, my mom passed away, and Sophia was born two weeks later. We welcomed our second daughter, Ava, in 2004.
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I was at the end of a five-day journey that had begun in the UNESCO World Heritage site of Galle Fort, in southwestern Sri Lanka, and taken me across the southern tip of the island to the leopard reserve of Yala National Park. In between I had taken in the dramatic coastline of Weligama and had stopped for some beach time in Hiriketiya. Sri Lanka is a country I'm particularly fond of, so when I was asked to revisit to report this story, I seized the opportunity. Yes, I was dying to go back, but I'd had another motive for coming: I wanted to see if the island nation was ready to welcome international visitors again.
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The Hudson Valley has long drawn New York City dwellers in search of clean air, spectacular hikes, and upstate culture. Now a budding community of artisans-young farmers, bakers, vintners, distillers-is turning the region into a modern breadbasket.It is a tightly woven ecosystem that also extends to restaurants and hotels. At Tenmile Distillery, in the town of Wassaic, for example, the grain used to make whiskey comes from a farm in Tivoli, 30 miles away, while the gin and vodka it produces are served at stylish addresses like the Troutbeck (doubles from $580), a hotel in Amenia, and the restaurant Stissing House (entrées $22-$155), in Pine Plains.
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