YANTRAS Heavenly Geometries - Magical and Practical: Sacred Geometry, Includes Bhoot Pret (Ghost) Yantra and Vashikaran (get control over someone's mind) Yantras (Tantric Series Book 1)
Book Details
Author(s)Aghori Ji
ISBN / ASINB07BJ7YBK2
ISBN-13978B07BJ7YBK4
Sales Rank1,084,281
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This ebook covers topics: Sacred Geometry, The 7 categories of Yantra according to their use, ( each category consists many Yantras), Magical and Practical uses of Yantras includes Bhoot Pret (Ghost) Yantra and Vashikaran (get control over someone's mind) Yantras, The 7 Chakras, Sri Yantra, and The 15 Nityas. Each explained in complete with high quality photos.
The Yantra is the graphic, mathematics and magic representation of the divine one. It is an ancient tradition that gets lost in the night of the times; we can find graphic representations of God in the prehistoric mural paintings, games of numbers and magic squares in a lot of ancient cultures. But it is in the tantric tradition that the Yantras assume a bigger spectrum of uses.
The Yantras therefore should not be confused with magic or superstition, but they are a real tool of worship. The meaning of the word in Sanskrit is in fact instrument, support, machine, and device.
Many Yantras are contained in a square (bhupur) with four gates. The square represents the material world while the gates are the points of access into the Yantra. Geometric shapes, symbols, numbers inside are like parts of this mechanism. They lead us gradually towards its center representing the Supreme Consciousness. A yantra is an instrument that allows us to make an inner journey to the discovery of the Supreme Self.
Apart from invoking the divine, the Yantra is used by the Aghoris, and other sadhus, as object of meditation. It is painted in the walls of the temples or next to the dhuni (sacred fire). It is engraved on small copper plates and usually positioned in the mandir (temple). Or It is written within small squares of paper inside a silver or copper container as amulets (kavacha); for every application there is a specify Yantra.
The study of the Yantras is an important footstep in the particular sadhana (spiritual path) of the Aghoris. That's the reason for my great interest in this ancient knowledge and the reason that pushes me to share them.
The Yantra is the graphic, mathematics and magic representation of the divine one. It is an ancient tradition that gets lost in the night of the times; we can find graphic representations of God in the prehistoric mural paintings, games of numbers and magic squares in a lot of ancient cultures. But it is in the tantric tradition that the Yantras assume a bigger spectrum of uses.
The Yantras therefore should not be confused with magic or superstition, but they are a real tool of worship. The meaning of the word in Sanskrit is in fact instrument, support, machine, and device.
Many Yantras are contained in a square (bhupur) with four gates. The square represents the material world while the gates are the points of access into the Yantra. Geometric shapes, symbols, numbers inside are like parts of this mechanism. They lead us gradually towards its center representing the Supreme Consciousness. A yantra is an instrument that allows us to make an inner journey to the discovery of the Supreme Self.
Apart from invoking the divine, the Yantra is used by the Aghoris, and other sadhus, as object of meditation. It is painted in the walls of the temples or next to the dhuni (sacred fire). It is engraved on small copper plates and usually positioned in the mandir (temple). Or It is written within small squares of paper inside a silver or copper container as amulets (kavacha); for every application there is a specify Yantra.
The study of the Yantras is an important footstep in the particular sadhana (spiritual path) of the Aghoris. That's the reason for my great interest in this ancient knowledge and the reason that pushes me to share them.
