冠泰佛 Champ Thai Fu Limited
Luang Phor Chin Nai's 2562 BE Tai Chi Headless Tiger (5th and 7th Tigers)
Luang Phor Chin Nai's 2562 BE Tai Chi Headless Tiger (5th and 7th Tigers)
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Name: Tai Chi Headless Tiger (also known as Headless Tiger)
Master: Luang Phor Chen Nai
Temple name: Wat khunakorn
Buddhist calendar year: 2562
The Tai Chi Tiger represents: good interpersonal relationships and wealth (both fulfilling).
Effects: Improves interpersonal relationships and attracts benefactors; enhances wealth, business and career luck, business opportunities, overall fortune, brings good luck, ensures safety and health, protects against disasters and dangers, boosts authority and confidence, and strengthens one's magnetic field.
This is the power of two headless tigers within the same amulet. One amulet contains dual power. It is unique in itself. #Anyone who sees it will surely be terrified by its super power, the hidden compassion within Luang Pho. He had a vision of seeing a yin-yang coin. Therefore, he had the idea to create a yin-yang tiger coin. He gave it to his disciples as a souvenir during the Jia Ting incident. #Currently, Luang Pho sees the economy is bad, and transactions are difficult among his disciples. Therefore, he prepared this coin as a feng shui foundation. He believes it will help business, sales, and is a god of wealth. #Wealth, fortune, riches, money, gold, progress, and smooth sailing in life and business. Yin and yang are always a pair; things are always a pair, there must be light and heat, there must be cold.
On the other side is an eight-way diagram symbol or a spider web.
Based on the science of Yin-Yang balance, it is believed to ward off evil forces. It is considered an auspicious object in Feng Shui. The motto of this belief is the creation of the spider to capture wealth. By using the theme of the Great Wealth Spider, especially for those in trade or business, money, gold, and treasures are trapped. There is no need to go out and solicit or tirelessly seek out clients, because clients will come to you. This is why the Yin-Yang Tiger is accepted by disciples worldwide.
Luang Phor Chen Nai's headless tiger amulets are legendary in Thailand, especially in Northern Thailand. Suitable for all professions, they offer protection, improve interpersonal relationships, attract wealth (both expected and unexpected), and enhance overall fortune. They are believed to prevent malevolent spirits from approaching, and are particularly effective in avoiding trouble, disasters, and accidents involving weapons. They are also believed to strongly ward off legal troubles, increase power and leadership, improve gambling luck, and provide invulnerability in times of crisis, boosting one's aura. The master stated that the headless tiger not only attracts good relationships and wards off evil, but also possesses invincible power, offering all-around protection against danger and misfortune, protecting against backstabbers, evil spirits, and weapons, making one fearless. Without a tiger's head, one is unassailable and invincible! It is a highly effective and all-encompassing sacred object. The master also said that whether you get a tattoo or wear a headless tiger amulet, as long as you sincerely pray, the headless tiger will definitely help you and fulfill your wishes. A robbery gang that terrorized the Chonburi area was repeatedly targeted by police, but their bullets either couldn't penetrate their skin or remained invisible, causing significant casualties among the officers. Later, undercover agents infiltrated the gang and discovered that the members all possessed tattoos or sacred objects from Luang Phor Chen Nai, rendering firearms ineffective. The police then sought Luang Phor Chen Nai's assistance, and he successfully removed the power from the sacred objects and tattoos, finally allowing the police to arrest or kill all the robbers. Following this incident, the police implored Luang Phor Chen Nai to be more discerning in choosing those who would get tattoos and not to indiscriminately tattoo criminals. In addition, there was a case where a disciple of the master was shot multiple times by robbers in a shop but emerged unharmed.
The Tai Chi symbol, with its unfathomable power, illustrates the importance of Tai Chi in the history of Chinese thought. It is primarily inherited from the *I Ching* (Book of Changes): "The *I Ching* has the Great Constancy, which gives rise to two moors. Two moors give rise to four horses, and four horses give rise to the Eight Trigrams." Therefore, "Constancy" was changed to "Ultimate," and the four horses were simultaneously transformed into the Four Symbols. "Tai" and "Great" were interchangeable in ancient times, and "Tai" was also interchangeable with "Tai." The original text refers to the two hexagrams, Tai and Heng. "Kunqian" is a type of *I Ching* text originating from the Shang Dynasty. Kun represents the virtue of metal, and the Shang Dynasty ruled with the virtue of metal; therefore, Kunqian represents the *I Ching* of the Shang Dynasty. The *I Ching* of the Shang Dynasty was considered the Way of Heaven.
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