Skip to content
Perusino erwischt Inti am Strand

Perusino catches Inti on the beach

Interview with the sun god about light, rhythm, gold and Inti Raymi

Inti, the sun god. A beach lies bright, and the waves sound like applause that never ends. Next to Perusino There's a small, high-tech setup that runs entirely on solar power. Solar panels absorb light, batteries display happily glowing green bars, and the camera acts as if it's braver than the sun. But one glance upwards is enough to make it clear who's really in charge here.

Perusino catches Inti on the beach

One name is associated with this light: Inti, the Sun god The Inca. A sun as a god initially sounds like a particularly bright lamp with an ego. A conversation quickly reveals that it's more about order, time, and everyday life. Perusino wants to know the details, preferably without sermons and without boredom.

Perusino: One thing is immediately noticeable: The electricity for the technology is coming From you. An interview with its own power supply sounds like a luxury. What mood is a Sun god, if humans stuff his light into batteries?

Sun god (Inti): A mood is more fitting for people. A benefit is a better fit. Solar energy indicates learning, not audacity. A mistake only occurs when rules are suddenly considered abolished.

Perusino: Rules keep popping up with you, like sand in your swimming trunks. What makes you tick if you want a child to only remember one image?

PeruMagazine - Peru, Perusina, Perusino

Sun god Inti: One promise defines me: to return. A second core element is warmth for growth. A third core holds everything together: rhythm, so that a day doesn't accidentally descend into chaos.

Sun god Inti: A promise makes me come back.

Perusino: Chaos at least has movement. Order sounds like people saying "Shhh" even though no one was raising their voice. Why is order so important to you?

Sun god Inti: Order makes time usable. Sowing needs the right moment. Harvesting needs the right moment. Supplies require planning. A kingdom without rhythm first gets empty stores, then loud heads.

Perusino: My head starts ringing when the light is too bright. Why does warmth sometimes feel like a cozy blanket and sometimes like a frying pan?

Sun god Inti: Moderation is key. Wind, clouds, and location also play a role. A break in the shade protects skin, eyes, and fields. A day without a break would be not a joy, but a burden.

Perusino: My shadow is so small at midday that it's probably ashamed. Then in the evening, it stretches out again like a show-off. What does that mean?

Sun god Inti: Time becomes visible. A clock is not needed. A shadow It shows how the day progresses, and the mind can learn that everything has its place. The timing is right.

Perusino: A specific time sounds like homework. A glittering theme sounds better: gold. Why did gold cling so closely to you among the Incas, as if it had rented your apartment?

Sun god Gold is a mirror for light. People love visible proof. Gloss appears as truth, even though it is often just surface. The sun god doesn't need metal, but people like to attach meaning to things that blink.

Perusino: Surface appeal works well for shellfish, less so for people. What happens in the brain when gloss is mistaken for importance?

Sun God: A gaze becomes greedier. Thoughts become lazier. A sense of security is feigned, even though nothing has become more secure. Work, provisions, and fairness sustain a kingdom, not splendor.

Perusino: Fairness suits a temple so famous that even cheeky voices fall silent: Coricancha in Cusco. What is this place actually supposed to achieve, other than leaving jaws on the floor?

Sun God: Remembrance should be created. Time is serious. Harvest is serious. Responsibility is serious. A temple is not a treasure chest, but a reminder so that duties are not forgotten.

Coricancha in Cusco

Perusino: Responsibility sounds difficult. A child-friendly version of it sounds better, because children tend to run away from difficult words, and very quickly at that.

Sun God: Sharing helps. Being careful helps. Accepting limits helps. A child knows this from playing: A game stays good if no one person takes everything and then shouts "Winner!"

Perusino: People can shout "Winner!" even without a game. A festival like Inti Raymi sounds like a huge group gathering. What really happens there if it's not just about looking up?

Sun God: Gratitude is expressed so that the good things are not taken for granted and disappear. Requests are made so that boundaries remain visible. A people remembers that the darker times are not the end. Unity warms before fear colds.

Perusino: I get scared when a wave suddenly speeds up faster than my legs. What happens when people take you for granted, like sand that's "always there" until it starts to scratch your sock?

Sun god Respect disappears. Moderation disappears. Waste and hoarding become more common. Distribution becomes more unfair. The sun god does not punish like a human, but consequences still follow.

Perusino: In Illapa, consequences always come with a bang. But there seems to be a team working up there nonetheless. What's your relationship with rain and thunder like, without it sounding like a series of arguments?

Sun God: Cooperation is key. Rain without light brings cold and mud. Light without rain brings dust and hunger. Life arises when both come together.

Conclusion: A gust of wind pushes sand over the solar panels, as if the beach itself wanted to test whether the technology could really withstand the test.

Diploma A gust of wind pushes sand across the solar panels, as if the beach itself were testing whether the technology could truly withstand the load. Perusino blows the sand away, the batteries continue to blink, and Inti hangs above it all like a silent promise. One feeling remains in the mind: the sun is not only beautiful, but also a kind of rulebook that starts anew every day, entirely without an instruction manual.

PeruMagazin channel on WhatsApp

Previous article Mama Killa Interview: Perusino meets the Inca moon goddess
Next article Perusino and Viracocha and the question of the beginning.

Leave a comment

* Required fields

Sponsors