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- 2 Piece Mother of Pearl and White Amethyst Necklace with Stainless Steel Tibetan Dorje Varja - 3 Ways to Wear
2 Piece Mother of Pearl and White Amethyst Necklace with Stainless Steel Tibetan Dorje Varja - 3 Ways to Wear
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White Amethyst: This gem is a natural tranquilizer, it activates spiritual awareness, has powerful healing and cleansing powers, stimulates vivid dreaming, guards against psychic attack, enhances intuition and psychic abilities. It’s said to dispel rage, help manage fears and anger, and calm rage and anxiety.
It has many health benefits including insomnia relief, stimulation of metabolism, and balance of the endocrine system. It boosts the immune system, helps to purify blood, reduces physical, emotional, and psychological pain and stress. Amethyst is useful for lungs and respiratory tract health, skin conditions, disorders in cells and diseases of the digestive system.
Amethyst a long history of use in many different cultures. In Britain and Russia, the royals adorned their crowns with amethyst symbolizing wealth and power. Catherine the Great adored the stone and required the stone be used on all of her personal articles. In Egypt amethyst amulets were worn for and protection in the afterlife. The Romans believed Amethyst had mystical powers that would protect them from drunkenness if they consumed wine in a cup festooned with the stone. The Greeks used Amethysts in healing practices. The stone was also used by soldiers for protection and religious leaders to ward off evil.
Mother of Pearl: Born from the iridescent inner layer of mollusk. It’s a protection gem thought to possess the gentle healing energies of the sea. Uses include stress relief, emotional harmony and balance, and the stimulation of intuition, sensitivity and adaptability. It was favored in ancient times by Egyptians, Sumerians, East Asians, and used in Islamic religious art. It gained its vast western popularity during the Victorian era. Origin: found worldwide in both salt and fresh waters
Dorje Varja: At the center of the vajra is a small, flattened sphere which is said to represent the underlying nature of the universe. It is sealed by the syllable hum (hung), representing freedom from karma, conceptual thought, and the groundlessness of all dharmas. Outward from the sphere, there are three rings on each side, which symbolize the three-fold bliss of Buddha nature. The next symbol found on the vajra as we progress outward are two lotus flowers, representing Samsara (the endless cycle of suffering) and Nirvana (release from Samsara). The outer prongs emerge from symbols of Makaras, sea monsters.
The number of prongs and whether they have closed, or open tines is variable, with different forms having different symbolic meanings. The most common form is the five-pronged vajra, with four outer prongs and one central prong. These may be considered to represent the five elements, the five poisons, and the five wisdoms. The tip of the central prong is often shaped like a tapering pyramid.
The Dorje represents the firmness of spirit and the achievement of high transcendental virtues, able to drive towards the Truth, destroying unawareness. Made like a scepter, can be single or double: in its quality of lightning, typical of many Eastern civilizations, is compared to the meteoric hammer of Thor, and to the thunderbolt and scepter of Zeus; indestructible weapon for the wrathful deities, spiritual power for the benevolent gods.
In the iconography and rituals of Tibetan Buddhism the Dorje is always accompanied by a Bell, and together these two symbols represent the opposites that coexist: the bell is in fact a symbol of the feminine side, of the diamond, of the physical body, while the Dorje is the masculine side, thunder and mind. During the Buddhist rites the Dorje is held in the right hand, while the bell in the left one.
The Dorje is often used in meditation rituals as a symbol of the union between the Relative Truth, represented by the experiences of everyday life, and the Absolute Truth, a state of being that we live in unity with nature and all that surrounds us. When during meditation both are used, the aim is to balance the masculine and feminine side of reality, and to achieve spiritual awareness.
Each part of the structure of Dorje has a precise meaning, in particular the two spherical ends: they not only represent the sunyata, the primordial structure of the universe, but they also symbolize the two parts of the brain. The dual aspect of Dorje also reminds one of the sacred symbols of Buddhism, two Lotuses that combined represent the union of the two worlds: the phenomenal one, Samsara, and the intangible one, Nirvana, while the parts that symbolize the petals refer to the four Bodhisattvas, enlightened beings, and to their wives.
The three central circles, which act as a point of union for the two extreme parts of Dorje, represent the bliss that the Buddha reached spontaneously, without effort. At the ends of the two Lotuses there are three circles, a symbol of the six ways that lead to perfection: patience, generosity, discipline, effort, meditation and wisdom.
The important message of holiness and purity, indicated by Dorje, doubles its power when it is represented double. The double Dorje, known as Visvavajra, also used as a seal for important documents, is often placed at the base of statues representing the main Tibetan and Indian deities, when worn is a reminder of the absolute indestructibility of Knowledge.
http://www.huakadugu.com/blog/index.php/the-dorje-vajra/
It has many health benefits including insomnia relief, stimulation of metabolism, and balance of the endocrine system. It boosts the immune system, helps to purify blood, reduces physical, emotional, and psychological pain and stress. Amethyst is useful for lungs and respiratory tract health, skin conditions, disorders in cells and diseases of the digestive system.
Amethyst a long history of use in many different cultures. In Britain and Russia, the royals adorned their crowns with amethyst symbolizing wealth and power. Catherine the Great adored the stone and required the stone be used on all of her personal articles. In Egypt amethyst amulets were worn for and protection in the afterlife. The Romans believed Amethyst had mystical powers that would protect them from drunkenness if they consumed wine in a cup festooned with the stone. The Greeks used Amethysts in healing practices. The stone was also used by soldiers for protection and religious leaders to ward off evil.
Mother of Pearl: Born from the iridescent inner layer of mollusk. It’s a protection gem thought to possess the gentle healing energies of the sea. Uses include stress relief, emotional harmony and balance, and the stimulation of intuition, sensitivity and adaptability. It was favored in ancient times by Egyptians, Sumerians, East Asians, and used in Islamic religious art. It gained its vast western popularity during the Victorian era. Origin: found worldwide in both salt and fresh waters
Dorje Varja: At the center of the vajra is a small, flattened sphere which is said to represent the underlying nature of the universe. It is sealed by the syllable hum (hung), representing freedom from karma, conceptual thought, and the groundlessness of all dharmas. Outward from the sphere, there are three rings on each side, which symbolize the three-fold bliss of Buddha nature. The next symbol found on the vajra as we progress outward are two lotus flowers, representing Samsara (the endless cycle of suffering) and Nirvana (release from Samsara). The outer prongs emerge from symbols of Makaras, sea monsters.
The number of prongs and whether they have closed, or open tines is variable, with different forms having different symbolic meanings. The most common form is the five-pronged vajra, with four outer prongs and one central prong. These may be considered to represent the five elements, the five poisons, and the five wisdoms. The tip of the central prong is often shaped like a tapering pyramid.
The Dorje represents the firmness of spirit and the achievement of high transcendental virtues, able to drive towards the Truth, destroying unawareness. Made like a scepter, can be single or double: in its quality of lightning, typical of many Eastern civilizations, is compared to the meteoric hammer of Thor, and to the thunderbolt and scepter of Zeus; indestructible weapon for the wrathful deities, spiritual power for the benevolent gods.
In the iconography and rituals of Tibetan Buddhism the Dorje is always accompanied by a Bell, and together these two symbols represent the opposites that coexist: the bell is in fact a symbol of the feminine side, of the diamond, of the physical body, while the Dorje is the masculine side, thunder and mind. During the Buddhist rites the Dorje is held in the right hand, while the bell in the left one.
The Dorje is often used in meditation rituals as a symbol of the union between the Relative Truth, represented by the experiences of everyday life, and the Absolute Truth, a state of being that we live in unity with nature and all that surrounds us. When during meditation both are used, the aim is to balance the masculine and feminine side of reality, and to achieve spiritual awareness.
Each part of the structure of Dorje has a precise meaning, in particular the two spherical ends: they not only represent the sunyata, the primordial structure of the universe, but they also symbolize the two parts of the brain. The dual aspect of Dorje also reminds one of the sacred symbols of Buddhism, two Lotuses that combined represent the union of the two worlds: the phenomenal one, Samsara, and the intangible one, Nirvana, while the parts that symbolize the petals refer to the four Bodhisattvas, enlightened beings, and to their wives.
The three central circles, which act as a point of union for the two extreme parts of Dorje, represent the bliss that the Buddha reached spontaneously, without effort. At the ends of the two Lotuses there are three circles, a symbol of the six ways that lead to perfection: patience, generosity, discipline, effort, meditation and wisdom.
The important message of holiness and purity, indicated by Dorje, doubles its power when it is represented double. The double Dorje, known as Visvavajra, also used as a seal for important documents, is often placed at the base of statues representing the main Tibetan and Indian deities, when worn is a reminder of the absolute indestructibility of Knowledge.
http://www.huakadugu.com/blog/index.php/the-dorje-vajra/