Vedic Yantra astrologer
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Indian Horoscope , Horoscope Matching
In actual practice a Vedic Yantra is a symbolic representation of aspects of divinity, usually the Mother Goddess. It is an interlocking matrix of geometric figures, typically circles, triangles and floral patterns that form fractal patterns of great elegance and beauty. Though drawn in two dimensions, a Vedic Yantra is supposed to represent a three dimensional object. Three-dimensional Vedic Yantras are now becoming increasingly common. The Vedic Yantra is primarily a meditation tool both for serious spiritual seekers as well as sculptors in the classical tradition. Before creating their artifact in wood, stone or metal, they draw up a Vedic Yantra that represents the attributes of the god they wish to sculpt. Intense meditation upon it causes the fully formed image to leap into the mind’s eye with an intensity that is remarkable for its imprinting ability, for then they do not need to use a sketch till the completion of the image. Vedic Yantras are also used for more mundane purposes, to enhance the quality of life, to attract prosperity and abundance, even love, to heal and relieve health problems, to protect oneself from negative forces and so on.
The Vedic Yantra is mistakenly thought to be a symbol purely of the manifold aspects of the Mother Goddess. This is an understandable error as most Vedic Yantras are indeed connected to the Goddess the most famous one being the Sri Vedic Yantra, an abstract representation of the Mother (and Father too!) as Cosmos. This Sri Vedic Yantra is commonly misunderstood to represent Laxmi, goddess of fortune, but it is more true to say it includes and transcends every notion of divinity ever conceived by the Indian spiritual imagination. However there are Vedic Yantras for Ganesha and Kubera too, male deities, though they share a common Yaksha origin with Laxmi. The Yaksha were the original chthonic deities of India and the Vedic Yantra system seems to have been incorporated into the Vedic worldview at a later stage.
Within the body of the more complex Vedic Yantras are inscribed the monosyllabic mantras, the bija or seed mantras, that are supposed to constitute the spiritual body of the goddess or god. The design always focuses the attention onto the center of the Vedic Yantra, usually a dot or bindu, which is the Locus Mundi, the center of all things and represents the Unmanifested Potential of all creation. The other figures usually symbolize the various stages within the unfolding of creation. Thus, every Vedic Yantra is a symbolic representation of both the deity as well as the universe, as the mother goddess not only permeates the substance of the universe, she is, literally, the Universe itself. Abstract geometric representations of the universe, which do not represent a diety, are called mandalas, however. Thus every Vedic Yantra is a mandala, though not all mandalas are Vedic Yantras.
In ancient texts, Lord Shiva is supposed to have explained the mystical meaning of the Vedic Yantra to his consort, the Goddess Parvati thus, “The Vedic Yantra is as essential to a god as oil is to the oil lamp or as a body is to a living human being”. Vedic Yantras are constructed on the immutable laws of sacred geometry, being symbolic representations of the energy patterns of a deity and are the most powerful ‘centering’ devices for harnessing the divine energies. The Vedic Yantra is actually more powerful than an image of god which, to be energized, needs a Vedic Yantra to be affixed at its base or back anyway! A Vedic Yantra always has a mantra associated with it. Just as the mind is a part of yet different from the body, so is the mantra from the Vedic Yantra. The mantra is the mind consciousness while the Vedic Yantra is the form of the deity.