-40%
Tibetan Silver-plated Spin-ring: Om Mani Padme Hum - Sizes from 3 to 12
$ 8.97
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Wear it, spin it and be blessed.Wear it on:
1) Index Finger for Authority
2) Middle Finger for Wealth
3) Ring Finger for Relationship
4) Pinkie for Warding Off Evils
Arriving at your ring's circumference
Simply take a strip of paper and go round the finger the ring is desired for.
Mark it and measure the length (Take note that it is usually broader at the knuckle).
Give the size according to the following measurement (Inside diameter/circumference):
US / Canadian Sizes:
Ring size 3 (approx 13 mm / 41 mm )
Ring size 4 (approx 14 mm / 44 mm )
Ring size 5 (approx 15 mm / 47 mm )
Ring size 6 (approx 16 mm / 50 mm)
Ring size 7 (approx 17 mm / 53 mm)
Ring Size 8 (approx 18 mm / 57 mm) - Please enquire before clicking
Ring Size 9 (approx 19 mm / 60 mm)
Ring Size 10 (approx 20 mm / 63 mm)
Ring Size 11 (approx 21 mm / 66 mm)
Ring Size 12 (approx 22 mm / 69 mm)
Best BUY IT NOW Price on eBay
Why watch it? Buy It Now! Buy with confidence!
Please let seller know your preference.
Note: Kindly ensure that you provide the CORRECT shipping address upon payment. Any re-delivery as a result of wrong address given will be chargeable.
Gentle use of the ring is encouraged.
Avoid contact with perfume and chemical.
DO wash and rinse off soap residue embedded between finger and ring.
Good for chanting purpose.
Stainless steel version of this prayer wheel ring is available.
About Prayer Wheels:
Prayer
wheels are called Mani wheels by the Tibetans. A prayer wheel is a wheel on a spindle, and on the wheel are written or encapsulated prayers
or mantras.
In Tibet, Prayer Wheels have been made for many centuries in a wide range of sizes and styles - from hand-held and table-top wheels, all the way up to giant eight or twelve foot Prayer Wheels with diameters of five to six feet. Often built around Buddhist Stupas and Monasteries, there may be long rows of prayer wheels which people will spin as they walk clockwise around the building, reciting what is considered to be one of the most profound and beneficial mantras; OM MANI PADME HUM
OM represents the body of all Buddhas;
MANI means 'jewel';
PADME, means "lotus";
HUNG represents the mind of all Buddhas
In
a translated text by the Fourth Panchen Lama, Amitabha Buddha says “Anyone who recites the six syllables while turning the dharma wheel at the same time is equal in fortune to the Thousand Buddhas.” In the same text Shakyamuni Buddha says that "turning the prayer wheel once is better than having done one, seven, or nine years of retreat" The prayer wheel, a very powerful merit field; is one that accumulates extensive merit and purifies obstacles.
It has been well known for over a thousand years by the great Buddhist yogis and teachers as well as the Tibetan people that the prayer wheel practice is an extremely quick, simple and profound method for developing compassion and wisdom. Buddhist teachers and the ancient texts expound the profound benefits of
the Prayer Wheel for its ability to quickly harmonize the environment, increase compassion, encourage a peaceful state of mind, and assist practitioners on their journeys to enlightenment.
It is advisable to recite the six-syllable mantra – Om Mani Padme Hum – while turning the prayer wheel. The Tibetan commentaries state that the benefits of doing so are immeasurable. This is the mantra of Avalokiteshvara, the Buddha of Compassion, and it is recited continually by many Tibetans. One also finds it carved on rocks, written on prayer flags, embossed on jewelry, and inside of most prayer wheels.
About OM MANI PADME HUM (pronounced: Ohm-Ma Nee-Pod May- Hum) Mantra:
’Om
Mani Padme Hum’ (translation: ‘Hail the jewel in the lotus’) is a six syllable invocation (mantra) of Avlokitesvara, one who is invoked as the
Protector from danger. It is claimed that one who recites this mantra will be saved from all dangers and will be protected. This mantra is widely used in Mahayana Buddhism. One can find this mantra inscribed on rocks, prayer wheels, stupa walls, loose stones heaped as Mani (jewels) on roads, paths, mountain passes, the approaches and exits of villages. One can find this Mantra inscribed outwardly in the prayer wheels with millions of this mantra inscribed on paper inside the prayer wheels. The
devotee turning one round of the prayer wheel means he recites this mantra millions of times. As this mantra is thought to save one from all
dangers, it is widely used in pendants, rings, etc.
Tibetan Buddhists believe that saying the mantra (prayer), Om Mani Padme Hum, out loud or silently to oneself, invokes the powerful benevolent attention and blessings of Chenrezig, the embodiment of compassion. Viewing the written form of the mantra is said to have the same effect.
Spinning
the written form of the mantra around in a Mani wheel (or prayer wheel) is also believed to give the similar benefit as saying the mantra, and Mani wheels, small hand wheels and large wheels with millions of copies of the mantra inside, are found everywhere in the lands influenced by Tibetan Buddhism.