Living in the Potala Palace, I am the greatest king of the snowy realm. Wandering the streets of Lhasa, I am the most beautiful lover in the world
ཕོ་བྲང་པོ་ཏ་ལའི་ནང་སྤོས་། ང་ནི་གངས་ལྗོངས་ཆེས་ཆེ་བའི་རྒྱལ་པོ་རེད་། ལྷ་སའི་ཁྲོམ་གཞུང་དུ་འཁྱམ་། ང་ནི་འཇིག་རྟེན་གྱི་ཆེས་མཛེས་ཤོས་ཀྱི་སེམས་པུ་ཡིན་།
The Sixth Dalai Lama, Cangyang Gyatso, is the most well-known Dalai Lama, the most talented and at the same time the most tragic.

It is said that Cangyang Gyatso was born into a serf family in the village of Wujianlin in the Yusong region of the Nala Mountains in southern Tibet, and was sent to the Potala Palace to become the sixth Dalai Lama at the age of fourteen.
Unable to stand the red tape of the lama system, Cangyang Gyatso, who was born with freedom of sex, sneaked down the mountain and, according to legend, fell in love with a woman, Maggie Ami, on another trip, and the two often dated in a small shop on Barkhor Street, which is today's Maggie Ami Bar.
Located in the heart of Barkhor Street, Maggie Ami Bar has become a must-see for travelers.
In Tibetan, "eight" means middle, and "ko" means turn. According to local saying, a circle around the Jokhang Temple is called a turning, and a circle around the wall of the Jokhang Temple is called a small turn, which is called Jakor in Tibetan; a circle around the rectangular Pakhor Street is called a transit, which is called the Eight Khors in Tibetan; a circle around the old city of Lhasa is called the Great Turn, the Tibetan is called Rinko, and the Bakuo Street is named after it.
After sunset, the people on Barkhor Street gradually dispersed, and devout Buddhists still insisted on their own steps, taking three steps and one five-body throwing ceremony to the ground, measuring the passage with their own bodies.