Jue Xing, what you dreamed about was King Garuda, which is the Garuda.
Garuda?
Garuda (Sanskrit: Garu?a), according to the "Garuda and the Secret Words of the Heavens", is China's Golden Wings The Dapeng or Garuda is a sacred bird recorded in Hindu and Buddhist scriptures. Various legends Hinduism According to Hindu myths and legends, Garuda is the mount of the great god Vishnu and is a secondary god. It is said that its wingspan is 3.36 million miles, covering the sky and the sun, and its feathers are colorful. According to Buddhist scriptures such as the Myoho Lotus Sutra, Garuda is one of the eight heavenly dragons that protect the Buddha. He has various solemn treasure statues, golden bodies, first-born wish-fulfilling beads, and has a sad sound. He eats one dragon king and five hundred dragons every day. Poison dragon, as the poisonous gas accumulated in his body, Garuda was unable to eat in the end. After flipping up and down seven times, he flew to the Vajra Wheel Mountain. The poisonous gas broke out and he burned himself all over his body, leaving only a pure blue glass heart. There are countless Garuda kings in the world, led by the four great Garuda kings: Mighty Virtue, Great Body, Great Man, and Ruyi. At the same time, Garuda is also one of the incarnations of Avalokitesvara. Tibetan Buddhism In the system of Tantric Buddhism, Garuda (Tibetan: khyung) is the mount of Karma Buddha in the north among the five Buddhas. It has a human face and a bird body, which means that the Dharma King attracts everything and everything returns. Legend of the Bai Nationality The Bai nationality in southwest China combines the worship of Garuda with their own worship of the golden rooster, making it the god of flood control and one of their totems. Image Generally speaking, Garuda appears in the form of a human face, a bird body, a bird face, or a full bird body. The body shape of a human-faced bird is like a king's shape above the navel. Only the beak is like an eagle's beak, green, with an angry face, teeth exposed, and the image of an eagle below the navel. He wears a pointed crown on his head, a double-haired shawl, a celestial robe, a ring on his hand, and a golden body. The two wings behind it are red and spread outward, and its tail is drooping and spread out. This is the image of Garuda on the national emblem of Thailand. In the Buddhist temples in the Central Plains of China, Garuda often appears as one of the incarnations of Avalokitesvara in the Yuantong Hall dedicated to Avalokitesvara. He is dressed in white robes and has the shape of a human, except for the sharp beak on his face, which is still in the shape of an eagle. . Full bird shape In southwest China, Garuda often appears as a golden rooster, standing on the top of a tower. In addition, Indonesia also uses Garuda as its national emblem, also in the form of a full bird. The origin of Garuda is the embodiment of the ancient world-wide giant bird worship in India, such as the immortal bird in ancient Egypt, the griffon (half griffin, griffin) that originated in the Mesopotamia and then spread to the Western world, and the ancient Greek Phoenix (phoenix, firebird), Arabian Roc (dapeng, condor, condor), Chinese roc, phoenix, Indian thunderbird, etc. Judging from the fact that Garuda's whole body was burned by fire when he died, he should have a closer connection with the immortal bird in Egypt. Since there are many venomous snakes in India, people added the ability to prey on venomous snakes as a worship symbol. object. Influence Garuda worship has a great influence in East Asia, Southeast Asia and South Asia with the spread of Hinduism and Buddhism. People worship Garuda as a symbol of strength. The name of the explanation reads: "Garuda" is a large bird with various solemn colors on its wings and a large tumor on its head, which is a wish-fulfilling pearl. This bird sings sadly and feeds on dragons. According to the ancient texts, Yue Fei is the reincarnation of the "Garuda", and Garuda is the Garuda. It eats one dragon and five hundred dragons every day. When it died, the dragons vomited poison and could no longer eat it, so they flew up and down seven times and flew to the top of the Diamond Wheel Mountain to die. Because it feeds on dragons (venomous snakes) all its life, it accumulates a lot of poisonous gas in its body, and it burns itself when it is about to die. In Jin Yong's "The Eight Parts of the Dragon", Garuda is clearly Jiumozhi in a symbolic sense. Jiumo Zhibaoxiang is solemn; he is an enemy of Dali Tianlong Temple, and has trouble with the "Dragon God" Duan Yu throughout the book; he eventually becomes possessed, and his pain is like self-immolation. But Jiumozhi is a lucky Garuda. He finally returned the "poisonous energy" (internal power) in his body to the dragon (Duan Yu), and thus became enlightened and became a "Garuda" like Yue Fei.