Portrait of S.S.

$4,800.00
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The aura of S.S. naturally drifts with shades of bright lavender and yellow. However, in this portrait, the colors have submerged into deeper layers, taking on a dense and profound form.

The deep blue spreading across the background represents the abyss of the Lemurian sea, to which she once offered her life. A psychic once described her as a High Priestess of Lemuria, but I became certain of that past the moment I looked into the depths of her eyes. There, I found an inexpressible sorrow from the time she sank into the ocean along with the continent, inseparable from a poignant hope for a reunion.

The reason she shed tears as a child upon hearing Auld Lang Syne (Hotaru no Hikari) without knowing why is surely because her soul remembered the final light she saw at the bottom of the sea. While known as a Scottish folk song, legend suggests its origins trace back to the era of Lemuria. It is said to be the song that the priests, who chose to perish with the continent as it submerged overnight, continued to sing to pray for the safety of their fleeing compatriots and to pledge their eventual reunion.

The pure, white light at the center represents the very soul of a woman who stands at the front lines of life as a head nurse. The reason this light is so powerful and the colors so concentrated is that her compassion is not a mere ideal; it is an immortal brilliance crystallized by enduring a history of deep despair and self-sacrifice.

The aura of S.S. naturally drifts with shades of bright lavender and yellow. However, in this portrait, the colors have submerged into deeper layers, taking on a dense and profound form.

The deep blue spreading across the background represents the abyss of the Lemurian sea, to which she once offered her life. A psychic once described her as a High Priestess of Lemuria, but I became certain of that past the moment I looked into the depths of her eyes. There, I found an inexpressible sorrow from the time she sank into the ocean along with the continent, inseparable from a poignant hope for a reunion.

The reason she shed tears as a child upon hearing Auld Lang Syne (Hotaru no Hikari) without knowing why is surely because her soul remembered the final light she saw at the bottom of the sea. While known as a Scottish folk song, legend suggests its origins trace back to the era of Lemuria. It is said to be the song that the priests, who chose to perish with the continent as it submerged overnight, continued to sing to pray for the safety of their fleeing compatriots and to pledge their eventual reunion.

The pure, white light at the center represents the very soul of a woman who stands at the front lines of life as a head nurse. The reason this light is so powerful and the colors so concentrated is that her compassion is not a mere ideal; it is an immortal brilliance crystallized by enduring a history of deep despair and self-sacrifice.