Bead age is unknown. Dzi bead does not appear to have weathered outside laying in a field, undergone freezing temperatures or to have been carried long term around the neck. A sacred keepsake for your spiritual journey. Native crafts help support Tibetan refugees. Reiki Tummo energy blessing added for health & happiness. Dzi stones may have made their first appearance in 1000 BC, in ancient Tibet: a few thousand were brought back by Tibetan soldiers from Persia. Dzis were crafted using agate as the base stone & then fabricated with lines & circles using unique ancient methods & techniques by Persian craftsmen. Fear of the "evil eye" was taken very seriously by these people, so they created talismans with "eyes" on them as a "fight fire with fire" form of protection. Shepherds & farmers pick them up in the grasslands or while cultivating fields. Because dzi are found in the earth, Tibetans cannot conceive of them as man-made. One reason the beads may be found near the surface in places such as freshly tilled fields, for example, may be because ancient monks were burned in funeral pyres (wearing the beads), & long after the remains were gone, the beads therefore remained, & were found at later dates. In Tibetan culture they are believed to attract protector deities. Amulets protect a person from trouble & bring good luck. Protector of Buddhist Law The Dragon thunders in the sky with the sound of compassion that awakens us from delusion & increases what we can know through hearing. Dragons have the power of complete communication. Just as we do not see sound, we do not see dragons. Associations: main quality is power, dominance over the sea & the water element. In Buddhism the dragon is the vehicle of Vairocana, the white Buddha of the east or center. The azure or turquoise dragon is the vehicle of many Buddhist protector deities, aquatic or storm gods & guardians of treasure. The Dragon brings 4 Benedictions of the East: wealth, virtue, harmony & long life.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 weeks ago