Technically, Tibetan singing bowls are types of bells, that are in the family of standing bells. This means that they are not attached to handles. Instead of being upside down, they sit like a bowl, with the open end on top. The sides of these bells/bowls make sound when they vibrate. In ancient Asian traditions, Tibetan Singing Bowls were used as part of Tantric and Bon Buddhist sadhana. Nowadays, they are used across the globe, both religion-related and not. They are also used for meditational purposes, relaxing, health care, inducing trances, and personal well being and health.
Though in the past they were manufacured in Nepal, India, Tibet, China, Bhutan, Japan and Korea, nowadays Tibetan singing bowls are manufactured in only Korea, Japan, Nepal and India. The best known types are from the Himalayas. The origins of Tibetan singing bowls lie in Buddhist tradition. In Buddhism, singing bowls are used in conjunction with meditation and prayer. For instance, Buddhists in China use the bowls to go along with the wooden fish while chanting. They strike the bowls during a specific phrase in a mantra or hymn. In Vietnam and Japan, singing bowls are used in a comparable fashion, or can also signal the passage of time or a change in activitty.
Some people say that Tibetans use the bowls for meditation, but other people say that they were used as magical tools for transforming themselves and other matters. Neither of these hypotheses are confirmed by reference to any religious sources, however. There are no references that Tibetans even used the bowls in any religious context, for anything other than holding items in them. The use of Tibetan singing bowls in Tibet is the subject of much debate and many stories. Some people say they were used for meditation while others say they were magical tools for transformation of self and of matter. However, neither theory is supported by reference to any Tibetan religious sources and indeed there is no evidence that Tibetans ever employed bowls in a religious context for anything other than receptacle purposes. It is probably that the bowls were used in rituals.
standing bells. They are not attached to handles. Instead of being upside down,
they sit like a bowl, with the open end on top. The sides of these bells/bowls
make sound when they vibrate. In ancient Asian traditions, Tibetan Singing Bowls
were used as part of Tantric and Bon Buddhist sadhana. Nowadays, they are used
across the globe, both religion-related and not. They are also used for
meditational purposes, relaxing, health care, inducing trances, and personal well
being and health.
Though in the past they were manufacured in Nepal, India, Tibet, China, Bhutan,
Japan and Korea, nowadays they are manufactured in only Korea, Japan, Nepal and
India. The best known types are from the Himalayas. The origins of Tibetan
singing bowls lie in Buddhist tradition. In Buddhism, singing bowls are used in
conjunction with meditation and prayer. For instance, Buddhists in China use the
bowls to go along with the wooden fish while chanting. They strike the bowls
during a specific phrase in a mantra or hymn. In Vietnam and Japan, singing
bowls are used in a comparable fashion, or can also signal the passage of time or
a change in activitTy.
Some people say that Tibetans use the bowls for meditation, but other people say
that they were used as magical tools for transforming themselves and other
matters. Neither of these hypotheses are confirmed by reference to any religious
sources, however. There are no references that Tibetans even used the bowls in
any religious context, for anything other than holding items in them. The use of
singing bowls in Tibet is the subject of much debate and many stories. Some
people say they were used for meditation while others say they were magical tools
for transformation of self and of matter. However, neither theory is supported by
reference to any Tibetan religious sources and indeed there is no evidence that
Tibetans ever employed bowls in a religious context for anything other than
receptacle purposes. It is probably that the bowls were used in rituals.

US $23.00



