Dharani cord: Difference between revisions
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The '''[[dharani]] cord''' ([[Wyl.]] ''gzungs thag'') is a string of five-colored threads attached to the [[mandala]] on one end, and to a [[vajra]] on the other. During a [[drupchen]], the vajra is held by the vajra king (the master presiding over the practice) during the [[mantra]] recitation, and the rest of the time by the practitioners holding the continuous recitation of the mantra. The cord links together the front and self-visualizations. | The '''[[dharani]] cord''' (Tib. གཟུངས་ཐག, ''zung tak'', [[Wyl.]] ''gzungs thag'') is a string of five-colored threads attached to the [[mandala]] on one end, and to a [[vajra]] on the other. During a [[drupchen]], the vajra is held by the vajra king (the master presiding over the practice) during the [[mantra]] recitation, and the rest of the time by the practitioners holding the continuous recitation of the mantra. The cord links together the front and self-visualizations. | ||
[[Category: Shrine and Ritual]] | [[Category: Shrine and Ritual]] |
Latest revision as of 20:37, 6 June 2020
The dharani cord (Tib. གཟུངས་ཐག, zung tak, Wyl. gzungs thag) is a string of five-colored threads attached to the mandala on one end, and to a vajra on the other. During a drupchen, the vajra is held by the vajra king (the master presiding over the practice) during the mantra recitation, and the rest of the time by the practitioners holding the continuous recitation of the mantra. The cord links together the front and self-visualizations.