Tingsha Bells Prosperity
The Tingsha Bells Prosperity come with the Tibetan Eight Auspicious Symbols that show the path to Enlightenment.
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€42.00
The Tingsha Bells Prosperity come with the Tibetan Eight Auspicious Symbols that show the path to Enlightenment.
Please click here to return to the main category page.
Only 1 left in stock
Tingsha Bells Prosperity
The Tingsha Bells Prosperity come with the Tibetan Eight Auspicious Symbols that show the path to Enlightenment.
Please click here to return to the main category page.
Tingshas are used as musical offerings in spiritual practices and during meditation practice. Ring at regular intervals to maintain concentration. “Musical offerings” are common during pujas (praying rituals) when a number of instruments are used: bells, drums, cymbals and horns. Musical offerings are indeed standard in many Tibetan Buddhist and Hindi rituals. Used with Feng Shui, meditation, cleansing, healing and alignment.
Strike the hand cymbals together and a beautiful, clear, high note will rise from them. They clear the air and create an extraordinary stillness. The scintillating tone of the tingsha instantly strikes a resonance within the human heart. Their purpose is to summon. They call us to awareness, to remember who we are, and to recognise our priorities.. When the user suspends them horizontally and strikes them together, a delightful, oscillating wave of sound seems to pass between them as they reverberate at a high frequency, creating an impressive symphony of evocative sounds.
We use them in Feng Shui to clear the energy present in a room and “open” it by sounding the tingshas in the four corners of a room. A great way to clear energy when, for example, smudging is not possible or appropriate.
By healing or balancing auric fields, cymbals we use them to define the beginning and the end of a period of meditation. Some say the use of tingshas is like summoning. It brings our awareness into the here and now.
As with many altar offerings, we recommend placing them wrapped in cloth when not in use, or keep them in a special tingsha brocade two compartment holder.
The casting may include decoration of the upper surfaces – usually depicting dragons, the mantra “Om Mani Padme Hum” or Buddhist symbols like the Tibetan eight auspicious signs. But many tinghas are just plain, shining entirely through the beauty of their sound.
Each tingsha is individually sand cast and typically made mainly from brass (a metal alloy of mainly copper and zinc) or bronze (mainly copper and tin alloy). While both sounding beautiful, the bronze cymbals produce an even more powerful harmonic resonance that vibrates even deeper through every fiber of your soul.