Now we slowly and carefully seal each jar with the red wax to preserve the offerings.
This dragon vase was made of bone. We sealed and placed a golden lotusin the middle of the hot wax.
The last part of the process: I glue on the lid. This will ensure the
dragon vase to be preserved over time. Remember these vases are buried underground
and will release the blessings and prayers over decades of time.
This is the mudra of the Dragon Vase Practice. If you look closely it appears like a head of a dragon. Sometimes when I am holding
this mudra and singing the mantra I move my hands skywards,
still holding the mudra. You can feel the energies of the dragon
running though your body. So be prepared for the experience.
This is the beginning of the mudra before you criss-cross your fingersto create the dragon head.
The Dragon Vase Practice
You begin by calling the Five Dhyani Buddhas
I call forth the Presence of the Five Dhyani Buddhas
Amitabha, Amoghasiddhi, Akshobhya,
Ratnasambhava
Vairochana
Now it is time to make the refuge prayer:
I take refuge in the Five Dhyani Buddhas
I take refuge in the Dharma
I take refuge in the Sangha
Then you make the four Immeasureable Vows:
I vow to have limitless kindness towards all beings
I vow to have limitless compassion towards those who are suffering.
I vow to have limitless joy over the salvation of others from suffering.
I vow to have limitless equanimity towards friend and foe.
Now you call the Dragon King and I also include his retinue.
I give the Dragon King to the Five Dhyani Buddhas.
I call forth the Dragon King and his retinue.
I give you to the Five Dhyani Buddhas
For your own enlightenment and also healing.
May you have long life, wealth, good fortune and happiness.
You now perform the Dragon Mudra and begin the Mantra which is
Namo Sam-man-doh mo-toh nam wah-ri-la-me
The mantra is performed at the least 108 times but usually
I will do about 5oo mantras or more.
You will visualize the vase turning into the Dragon King as you repeat the mantra.
When you are finished performing the mantra you sit in Silence
and begin to visualize the five Buddhas over the vase.
Each Buddha is represented in one of the five dharma colors red, yellow, green, white, and blue.
You see the Dragon King rise up and merge with the five Buddhas.
The Dragon King dissolves into the five Buddhas.
Then the five Buddhas dissolve into the radiant light of the five colors.
Then the colors dissolve into the vases below.
You have now completed the first day of the practice.
Repeat this practice for seven days without missing a day over the vases.
The seventh day you have finished the dragon vase practice and it is now time to
store the vases until they are ready to be offered to the Dragons in Nature.
When I offer these vases to the Dragons I usually recite the refuge prayer and then
offer the mantra and mudra as I bury the vase.