Prayer Wheel Featuring Buddhist Auspicious Symbols | Buddhist Spinning Prayer Wheel
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Size: 22m (Height) x 20cm (Width)
Weight: 0.60kg
Materials:
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About our Prayer Wheel
This Tibetan prayer wheel featuring Buddhist Auspicious Symbols is 22 cm tall, 20 cm broad, and weighs 0.60 kg. It is a finely handcarved wooden frame that holds a copper alloy spinning wheel decorated with Buddhist auspicious motifs. This prayer wheel's meticulous craftsmanship and elaborate design make it a meaningful and attractive addition to meditation rooms, altars, or sacred spaces in your home.
The prayer wheel is delicately engraved with mantras and auspicious symbols, including the lotus, vajra, and other classic Buddhist symbols. These designs not only improve their visual attractiveness, but also increase the spiritual force of the wheel. The copper alloy wheel spins smoothly, allowing practitioners to revolve it clockwise to gain merits and blessings, in accordance with Tibetan Buddhist practice.
Prayer wheels have great spiritual importance, since they are said to double the power of chanted mantras and prayers as they revolve. Using this prayer wheel for meditation or prayer promotes compassion, tranquility, and positive energy. It represents centuries of Himalayan spiritual tradition and craftsmanship, making it an essential tool for cultivating awareness and devotion in your own sacred space.
Introduction to Prayer Wheel
A prayer wheel is cylindrical on a spindle and is used in Tibetan Buddhism. It is typically inscribed with the mantra "Om Mani Padme Hum" and rotated by hand as a form of spiritual practice and to accumulate merit. Spinning the wheel is believed to have the same spiritual benefits as verbally reciting the mantra. The use of prayer wheels is widespread in Tibetan Buddhism and has spread to other cultures.
How does the Buddhist Prayer Wheel benefit us?
The benefits associated with rotating the wheel are numerous. It promotes knowledge, compassion, and bodhicitta in the practitioner and improves siddhis (spiritual powers such as clairvoyance, precognition, etc.). The practitioner can repeat the mantra as often as possible while the wheel is rolling, maintaining a calm, meditative attitude. A Tibetan Buddhist tradition holds that after a practice session, one should dedicate any acquired merits to the benefit of all sentient beings. Then three times Om Ah Hum. This is usually among Tibetans after finishing any Buddhist practice, including the prayer wheel exercise.
How do you set up your own Buddhist Shrine?
• Find a clean, quiet, and uncluttered spot
• Set up an altar table and cover it with an altar cloth that calls to you
• Place your sacred item at the center