Link Alternatif Fortuna is an ancient Indian text written in Hindi by Ajatsatru and it talks about the four stages of human life, which are: Hatwa (birth), Kriya (journey to India), Sattva (skill or material possessions) and Tamas (conquest). The meaning of the text goes that one should accumulate as much wealth as possible before leaving his or her home to face difficulties in the field of business. There is a myth that if you can complete the four stages successfully, then you will be eligible for Yama Mandala, which is a divine boon.
Link Alternatif Fortuna tells us that there are twenty-eight conditions that must be met in order for one to stand a chance of reaching Yama Mandala. These conditions include: being rich or having abundance, being healthy and young, having faith in one's own capability, being contented and having faith in God, having courage and being prudent. It also tells you that the right attitude towards such conditions is more important than any specific skill. For instance, being rich and having abundance of good fortune is useless if one does not learn to have courage and if he or she does not learn to earn money regularly.
The basic word used in the text is "kerub" which means wealth. It is apparent from the context and the words that the author meant to convey that he or she believes that material possessions are blessings. The link between prosperity and wealth is made by the fact that it is impossible to obtain wealth without experiencing some form of hardship or suffering, and this goes to prove that it is impossible to attain riches and have wealth at the same time.
The word "fortuna" here is used to describe the country of Indonesia and the actual event that happened there is linked with the legend of the white snake. This legend goes like this: A white snake (kuda-kuda) was travelling along the road in the guise of a mendicant (gee-tee), when he met an Indian woman who offered him all his fortune in exchange for his hand. However, the snake ignored her request and continued on his way to the house of the Indian woman. When the woman asked her son where the snake had gone, the son answered that the snake had died of old age and was in the process of crossing over to the other world.
The legend then goes on to state that when the old man died, leaving his wife and three daughters behind, his body was discovered by some monks who had been travelling on their way to India. The monks took the body away and buried it in a hole made from banana leaves and earth and allowed it to be alone for some days. On the following day, the monks heard noises coming from the hole and they realized that the old man's spirit had been escaping from his body. Accordingly, they pried open the banana leaves and uncovered the white snake which promptly ran away into the holy river (via pulsa).
Thus, Link fortunabola is a traditional legend from the Indonesian archipelago that is told to welcome the reader to the "plantation of heaven". It is also celebrated on the first day of the new year (day of the kuda-kuda). Today, Link Alternatif Fortunabola is commonly associated with the practice of fortune telling, especially when it comes to the buko or ten chances, where the reader is supposed to predict and foretell events that may occur in the future. Today, Link Alternatif Fortunabola is considered as the national flower of Indonesia, and it is also used as a traditional symbol by the Balinese and other ethnic groups who still use the lung and other sacred plants in order to ward off evil spirits.
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