GREEN TARA SEICHIM
The divine bodhisattva, known as Tara, has assimilated into himself
various characteristics and qualities of the goddesses of the Himlai regions – from tribes and serpent deities to the great Shakti of Hinduism and even other goddesses. The deep devotion that the Tibetan people have to Tara and the true effectiveness of its practice in times of great difficulty have been invoked by millions of people as “the Great Noble Tara.”
Exactly when her cult developed is unknown. The Chinese pilgrim Hsuan Tsang, who visited the North Indian region between 633 and 645, shared without describing the deity Tolo as an image in a temple near the Buddhist University of Nalanda, to which the population is particularly devoted. Could Tolo have been Tara?
Its name has the Sanskrit root “tar” meaning “to cross [over]”, “tree”, “in particular” and is also associated with “star” and “pupil of the eye”. Sri Tara Devi in Hindu culture is the second of the ten Mahavids according to the Hindu tantra, which connects it to the Tibetan Buddhist tradition of Tara, in Tibet it is called Dolma, which can mean “Dark” or “Green”, as well as “The Savior”.
This ancient spiritual system is interpreted as the “Mother (source) of life energy” similar to the symbolism of Seikim “energy of living light”. Stephen Komi is a practicing Buddhist initiated by several high-ranking Tibetan lamas in the teachings of the Green Tara, which includes ancient mantras, sadhanas, including the practice of the 21 Tarimantras, and sacred symbols.
The practice of Green Tara helps to overcome fear and anxiety, but devotees believe that it can make wishes come true, eliminate all kinds of suffering and bring happiness.
When called upon, it instantly saves us from eight specific disasters. The first Dalai Lama interprets and presents as eclipses or weaknesses:
1) lions and pride;
2) wild elephants and delusions;
3) forest fires and hatred;
4) snakes and envy;
5) robbers and fanatical views;
6) imprisonment and greed;
7) floods and lusts;
8) demons and doubts;
Seichim, a word (pronounced “SAY-keem”) of unknown origin, but similar to the ancient Egyptian word sekhem (sxm), which means life force or energy. It is believed that this is a healing system that has ancient origins in Tibet. This practice is said to have been passed down from very ancient times. Seikim is not a religion, although this healing practice is becoming known in all cultures
worldwide. It has a built-in spiritual dimension. Now accepted worldwide, Seikim brings a concept of unity and harmony. Sekykim’s genealogy mentions a Buddhist deity, best known around the world for his female manifestation, known by many names to Chinese culture as Kuan-Ying. Many suspect that this may actually be a misunderstanding and that the divine being is actually the Savior of the world – Green Tara, the personification of love and compassion, she who was born of the tear that fell from the face of Bodhisattva Avalokitesvara when she took pity on human suffering.
Seikim was discovered in the late twentieth century by Patrick Zeigler. He first experienced this energy in 1979-80, while he was in the Great Pyramid, after that
he studied occult knowledge with the leader of the group of Sufi mystics Tariq Burhaniya, Saidi Fahrudin, Sheikh Mohammed Utman Abdu al Al Burhani (d. 1983). He later developed all the knowledge in a healing system, which he passed on to others using a Tibetan empowerment technique (which he modeled through his knowledge of Reiki). Various enriched versions of Seikim are now practiced around the world.
lEVEL 1 : PRACTITIONER
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LEVEL 2 : aDVANCED
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LEVEL 3 : MASTER / TEACHER
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