Yes Please!!!
Also you might want to try to use it periodically when interacting with loved ones, and they touch your Heart, and see their reaction and yours.
Yes Please!!!
Also you might want to try to use it periodically when interacting with loved ones, and they touch your Heart, and see their reaction and yours.
for her means beyond
hihihi!
it’s a very sensitive area… will feel this one…
yes, need to scan people first and feel if they will be ok with it and if I’m ok with unexpected reactions from them… feels like a “surgical” movement!..
Better to only do it around people with open hearts and open minds
" The kuji-in (Japanese: 九字印) or jiǔzìyìn (Chinese: 九字印), also known as Nine Hand Seals, is a system of mudras and associated mantras that consist of nine syllables. The mantras are referred to as kuji (Japanese: 九字), which literally translates as nine characters. The syllables used in kuji are numerous, especially within Japanese esoteric Mikkyō.[citation needed]
Scholars have stated that kuji is of Taoist origin, not Buddhist.[1] There is no mention of the kuji in any of the Buddhist Shingon or Buddhist Tendai records that Japan imported. The use of kuji is essentially a layman’s practice and is uncommon in many orthodox Buddhist traditions. It is, however, found extensively in Shugendō, the ascetic mountain tradition of Japan and Ryōbu Shintō, which is the result of blending Shingon Buddhism and Shinto. The nine Buddhist cuts in order are:
Rin. Pyo. To. Sha. Kai. Jin. Retsu. Zai. Zen
[edit]
The kuji are first introduced in the Bàopǔzǐ (Chinese: 抱朴子), a Chinese Taoist text written by Gé Hóng c. 280–340 CE). He introduces the kuji in chapter 17, entitled Dēngshè (登涉; lit. "Climbing [mountains] and crossing [rivers]), as a prayer to the Liùjiǎ (六甲; Six Generals), ancient Taoist gods. In Daoist Magic, the Jiǎ are powerful celestial guardians and are among the gods of the Celestial Thunder Court of Emperor Xuanwu.[2]
The kuji are first seen in line 5 which reads,
抱朴子曰:“入名山,以甲子開除日,以五色繒各五寸,懸大石上,所求必得。又曰,入山宜知六甲秘祝。祝曰,臨兵鬭者,皆陣列前行。凡九字,常當密祝之,無所不辟。要道不煩,此之謂也。”
Translation:
To enter a famous mountain, choose an opening day, which can be determined by its cyclical binary. Hang silk of the five colors, each piece five inches wide, from a large rock, so that you may be sure to succeed in your goal. Furthermore, while entering the mountains you must know the Six-Chia secret prayer. It goes like: “May the presiders over warriors be my vanguard!" This nine word prayer must constantly be recited in secret. It means, “May all evils flee me and the essential procedure present no trouble.” (Write, 1966)”