Yes. Or what looks like a kid (boy), anyway. He's a spirit who sacrifices himself by flying into a giant snake's mouth. It happens very early on in the movie.
There's something like a birth, only what's "born" is a grown snake. ------ SPOILER ----- SPOILER ----- SPOILER ----- SPOILER ----- SPOILER ----- It's birth-like in that the woman is lying on her back, suffering and bleeding from some part of her lower body (she's wearing long skirts, so technically it could be from some part other than her womb), and the snake comes slithering out between her feet. But really, it's an ancient, god-like snake leaving her body, in which it's been magically contained for years.
No one is pregnant. There is, however, something somewhat related to the subject of birth. Look up the triggers for birth, abortion and/or miscarriage for this movie if you want to know more.
No, but there's something like a birth, only what's "born" is a grown snake. The scene is birth- or abortion-like in that the woman is lying on her back, suffering and bleeding from some part of her lower body (she's wearing long skirts, so technically it could be from some part other than her womb), and the snake comes out from under her skirts between her feet. I imagine that the scene MAY be a miscarriage-related trigger, because the woman is very unhappy about her whole situation, and there's a lot of blood.
No, but someone is trapped, standing up, in a chamber that fills up with sand to the point where it's covering his head. It's reminiscent of a drowning scene, I'd say.
No, but someone's master (teacher), who's something of a father figure to a young man, dies right in front of the young man's eyes. The man dies in a magical way, slowly dissolving into what looks like smoldering flakes. --- Also, there are mentions of mothers having died.
Someone drinks alcohol early in the day, and someone else expresses somewhat shocked diaspproval. It doesn't seem to be a case of alcoholism, but it may be triggering.
Someone is standing in a rather narrow stone chamber (think well with a ceiling) that's filling up with sand, and the sand ends up covering everything but the person's upstretched arm.
No, but there's something like a birth, only what's "born" is a grown snake. Since the woman isn't actually giving birth, but unhappily choosing to expel a living thing from her body out of some degree of necessity, the scene may be an abortion-related trigger. The scene is birth- or abortion-like in that the woman is lying on her back, suffering and bleeding from some part of her lower body (she's wearing long skirts, so technically it could be from some part other than her womb), and the snake comes out from under her skirts between her feet.
Not exactly, but someone is slowly magically dissolved into what looks like smoldering flakes, which may be perceived as reminiscent of someone being burned alive.