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BLESSED & EMPOWERED CORAL RED
SARIRA PHRA TATH STUPA
WE DONATED DIRECTLY TO THE TEMPLE, THIS STUPA DID NOT COME FROM A STORE OR PRIVATE SELLER OR COMPANY.
YOU HAVE TO DONATE DIRECTLY TO A BUDDHIST TEMPLE TO MAKE SURE THE SARIRA RELICS ARE REAL
**** Sarira Phra Tath Buddha Relics from Phra Si Rattana Mahathat Temple Thailand. ****
These relics can also be called Phra Thad / Phra That / Phra Tart / & Phra Tad.
BUDDHA HEART & BLOOD RELICS INDIA
BUDDHA LOVE & LUCK RELICS INDIA
GAUTAMA BUDDHA * SHAKYAMUNI BUDDHA RELIC.
with NANG KWAK PHA YANT.
from the Wat Suwannaram Temple Bangkok. (see below).
**** Sarira Phra Tath Buddha Relics from Phra Si Rattana Mahathat Temple Thailand. ****
For love, finding a loving relationship and good health and good luck and protection.
Please Note: The single Nang Kwak Pha Yant Temple Cloth comes with this stupa pictures below.
Buddha relic stupa: 88 mm ( 3.47 inches ) tall x 46 mm (1.8 inches) wide (at widest part)
NANG KWAK Pha Yant: 5.5 inches x 3.5 inches.
WE DONATED DIRECTLY TO THE TEMPLE, THIS STUPA DID NOT COME FROM A STORE OR PRIVATE SELLER OR COMPANY.
**** Sarira Phra Tath Buddha Relics from Phra Si Rattana Mahathat Temple Thailand. ****
Buddha relic stupa: 88 mm ( 3.47 inches ) tall x 46 mm (1.8 inches) wide (at widest part)
Red / Purple colour: Originates from the blood and heart of the Buddha. For love, finding a loving relationship and good health.
(more pictures below)
This Sarira Phra Tath Buddha relic stupa has been created by monks at the Phra Si Rattana Mahathat Temple Thailand. These Buddha relics can also be called Sarira Phra Thad, Sarira Phra That, Sarira Phra Tart or Sarira Phra Tad. There are also many other different names but they are all Buddha relic’s. Sarira is the name for the crystallised remains of the bones and body of the Buddha after he was cremated. Sarira can also be found in the cremated remains of all high standing Buddhist spiritual masters. Sarira are very important relics as they embody the spiritual knowledge, teachings, realizations, living essence (spirit) of Buddhist spiritual masters. Sarira is the evidence of the Buddhist masters’ enlightenment and spiritual purity.
Sarira’s are usually displayed in a wearable amulet or in a stupa, they are also enshrined inside a Buddhist master's statue or embedded into a Buddhist amulet. Saffron threads are sometimes placed around the Sarira as an offering.
According to the Pali tradition nothing was left after the body of the Buddha was cremated except for the Sarira. The bones of the Buddha had been transformed into something that looked like COLOURED JEWELS and COLOURED SMALL PEARLS of many different shapes, sizes and colours. Sarira comes in Cabbage seed shape, Milled rice shape, Green bean shape, bone shape, round shape, and many other shapes.
It is believed that the smaller shapes of Sarira will float when placed in water and will attract each other when they float. The colour, shape and size of Sarira can increase or decrease by themselves. Most of the Sarira are much lighter compared to ordinary stones of the same size. Sarira should not be tested to see if it floats by an ordinary person as you would have to ‘Look down at the Buddha’. It is believed the Sarira can shine in the dark and can fly around in their amulet or stupa container.
The transformation from a cremated body into Sarira is wonderful as it is hard to believe that the remains and ashes could be transformed into something like glowing jewels of different colours and shapes.
Colours of Sariara (Buddha relics).
Orange / Gold / Yellow: Originates from the flesh of the Buddha. For fortune and wealth and business luck.
Red / Purple: Originates from the blood and heart of the Buddha. For love, finding a loving relationship and good health.
Pink / White / Clear: Originates from the head of the Buddha. For great knowledge, business and everyday luck.
Blue / Black: Originates from the chest of the Buddha: For self-confidence, securing a good relationship.
Green / Brown: Originates from the mind of the Buddha: For good luck, wealth and fortune.
A relic is: 1: An object surviving from an earlier time, especially one of historical interest. 2: A part of a deceased holy person's body or belongings kept as an object of reverence. 3: A person or thing that has survived from an earlier time.
Buddha relic stupa: 88 mm ( 3.47 inches ) tall x 46 mm (1.8 inches) wide (at widest part)
WE DONATED DIRECTLY TO THE TEMPLE, THIS STUPA DID NOT COME FROM A STORE OR PRIVATE SELLER OR COMPANY.
This Sarira Phra Tath, Buddha relic stupa was created, blessed and empowered by monks in the Phra Si Rattana Mahathat Temple, Thailand for ‘GOOD LUCK, PROSPERITY AND GOOD
FORTUNE’.
This sacred stupa will give you good luck when gambling, good luck in your work, good luck for your business, good luck in relationships and good luck in your life.
**** Sarira Phra Tath Buddha Relics from Phra Si Rattana Mahathat Temple Thailand. ****
This is the Pha Yant Temple Cloth that comes with this stupa picture below.
This blessed and empowered temple cloth talisman is called a Pha Yant.
It can also be called a 'Cloth Yant' a 'Paa Yant', a 'Payant' or a 'Yant cloth talisman'
Temple cloth 3.5 x 5.5 inches.
This sacred blessed and empowered 'Pha Yant' sacred temple cloth which is included with this Buddha relic stupa can be framed and hung on a wall, hung on a wall as it is, carried with you in your pocket or placed in your car to grant you a safe journey. It can be given to a friend or loved one as a special sacred gift. This 'Pha Yant' is for your protection from evil and bad spirits, and will protect you against bad luck. A 'Pha Yant' will protect you from danger. This 'Pha Yant' will grant you a long and healthy life and also grant your wishes. A sacred 'Pha Yant' can be given to grant blessings to a wedded couple to enable them to have many healthy children and to have a long and a happy marriage.
**** If you write your wishes on the back of a blessed 'Pha Yant' they will be granted .
Nang Kwak Pha Yant.
Nang Kwak is a benevolent spirit. She is deemed to bring great luck and prosperity especially in the form of money, to the household. She is the patron deity of all merchants, salesmen and business men and women. Pictures, statues and Pha Yants can be seen in almost every business establishment in Thailand.
The legend of Nang Kwak is one of the best known legends in Thailand and dates back to before the birth of Buddhism in Thailand. The legend of Nang Kwak originates from India where she was known as Supawadee, the daughter of a small merchant. Legend tells that occasionally Supawadee accompanied her father on his business trips. On one of these trips, after listening to a sermon, Supawadee became a devout follower of Buddhism. Because of her great devotion, a revered Monk by the name of Phra Gasabatera, bestowed blessings of good fortune on her. Phra Gasabatera also told her that if she followed all the teachings of the Dhamma (the teachings of the Lord Buddha), she would receive a special blessing.
Endowed with these blessings, whenever Supawadee accompanied her father on his trips, he was able to sell all his goods in a very short time. The family became very wealthy because of Supawadee and as her father was kind and generous, they were much loved by all the people they met on their travels. After her parents died, Supawadee continued the business earning the love and devotion of people all around. Eventually Supawadee died but not before many people had discovered that if they prayed to her their business transactions were more successful than before. Images were made of Supawadee after her death and offerings made to the young girl who was now believed to be a saint.
Nang Kwak is dressed in traditional Thai dress. In her left hand is a money bag and her right hand is beckoning Thai - style palm down. Nang Kwak is either beckoning customers to come into the store or asking for wealth to come her way.
It is also believed that Nang Kwak evolved from the Hindu Goddess Parvathi, the daughter of the mountains, who it was said the first to grow rice.
Some people believe Nang Kwak first appeared in Thailand as a rice prosperity goddess with a sheaf of rice over her shoulder the pre-Buddhist Mae Posop.
The name Nang Kwak can be roughly translated as ‘beckoning lady’ or ‘waving lady’. The Thais will often add the word ‘Mae’ which means ‘mother’ before her name as a sign of respect. There are regular stories in the Thai media of how paying devotion to this image has led to increased business prosperity.
The Buddha relics tour.
There are very few people in the world who can feel and sense and need this sacred and special power.
STUPA***
The Tibetan word is Chorten, which means "the basis of offering".
It is a symbol of enlightened mind, (the awakened mind, universal divinity) and the path to its realisation.
If you had to use just two words, the best definition is "Spiritual Monument"
The stupa represents the Buddha's body, his speech and his mind, but most especially his mind and every part shows the path to Enlightenment.
"The visual impact of the stupa on the observer brings a direct experience of inherent wakefulness and dignity. Stupas continue to be built because of their ability to liberate one simply upon seeing their structure" - Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
Every stupa contains
at the very least a life tree and holy relics:
"When a great teacher passes
away, his body is no more, but to indicate that his mind is dwelling forever in
an unchanging way in the dharmakaya, one will erect a stupa as a symbol of the
mind of the buddhas" - HH Dilgo Khyentse
Rinpoche
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Shamans throughout the world and throughout time, recognize that the universe is alive, conscious, and filled with spiritual power. Shamans know how to access this web of power and work with it skilfully and effectively to address their and their community's needs. Shamanism is the use of shamanic practices within a shamanic value system. Traditionally a shaman goes through the experience of a "calling", usually through illness, accident or some unusual quality of being, then through an arduous apprenticeship of teaching, training and testing, followed by some sort of passage rite into their new status. Typically shaman do not define themselves as such. Instead they are defined by their community based on what it is that they do. Becoming a shaman and living as a shaman is a difficult and demanding life path that many indigenous people shy away from because of its formidable requirements. It is not about fun and glamour. Unskilful and uneducated acts can cause harm, or even be life-threatening, to the practitioner as well as to others. For shamanism deals with power, and power can move in many different ways, like electricity. It is important to move slowly with respect, humility and care.
Pha Yant, Temple 'wishing' cloth from the Wat Suwannaram Temple Bangkok.
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These Sacred Blessed and Empowered items have PURE POSITIVE SACRED POWER and can and will be attuned to you. Do you remember long ago that you had the ability of second sight, and other special abilities. You might never have revealed this to anyone as you felt slightly afraid and were not sure in yourself. Years later life takes its toll and you now think that these special abilities that you had years ago are now gone. These abilities NEVER GO, you still have the same abilities but you now have to clear a path to open your mind and be able to go back to your childhood and let your mind open up. When you work with our Sacred Blessed items you will soon realise that these are SACRED SPECIAL TOOLS and will work for you in many different ways. They will open up a PURE POWER FLOW FOR YOU, and enable PURE POSITIVE ENERGY to enter your divine spirit.
Our sacred, rare, empowered and blessed items are being made available for the benefit of practitioners, like you, who would like to have holy objects as devotional support to your practice. It is contrary to our vows to engage in the business of selling holy objects for profit. Therefore we do not provide these objects in an ordinary way, thinking of them as goods to be bought and sold. Rather, we are making them available with the express wish to benefit others. All funds in excess of our costs help us to continue our activities.