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Por Sala Tan
Por Sala Tan
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Bodhi Tree Paneang – Por Sala Tan’s Ritual for the Unrested Dead
Coffin Nail Cast • Paneang Front from Real Victims • Yoni Force-Backed for Feminine Seneh and Wealth Magic
This is not a normal prai batch.
This is a ritual of redemption. A response to horror. A spiritual bridge built by Por Sala Tan to give form, voice, and value to the spirits of those who never received dignity in life.
⚰️ The Origin – A Mass Grave, A Master’s Response
Por Sala Tan was alerted to the discovery of a mass grave in a rural area—over 20 female bodies, mostly young girls, victims of sexual abuse, violence, and murder.
This was not a haunting to take lightly. The site held an oppressive, unbearable weight—the kind of unrested energy that lingers, curses, and decays anything nearby.
Most would avoid such a place.
But Por Sala Tan chose to intervene.
He raised funds, and with the help of trusted disciples, conducted a rare animistic ritual, rooted in old Burmese wicha, to stabilize these spirits, give them form, and offer them the chance to generate merit.
🌳 Sacred Structure of the Amulet
Each piece was made through a multi-stage ritual—nothing rushed, nothing mass-produced.
1. The Cast
A Bodhi tree base was cast using melted coffin nails—a classic medium to anchor restless spirits.
This was no ordinary mold. Every angle, every channel was designed to hold presence, and act as a vessel for unseen energy.
2. Spirit Hosting
Once the mold was emptied, it was filled with selected cemetery soil—not just for symbolic weight, but because soil from graves has the most natural conductivity for spirit lodging.
On the front of each piece, a Paneang face was drawn—each one unique, based on what Por Sala Tan saw during meditation on each spirit.
These are not abstract carvings. Each face represents a real girl, a real death, a real unresolved karmic force.
3. Back Side – Yoni Energy through Tarkruts
To complete the structure, tarkruts were embedded on the back in a formation meant to replicate the energetic flow of the yoni—amplifying feminine force, unlocking attraction, and bringing emotional and monetary magnetism.
This is not just charm magic.
It’s an honoring of life force that was violated—and is now redirected into something empowered.
4. Yant Work
Por Sala Tan personally meditated over each piece, inscribing yants by hand, on the front and back of the coffin nail cast.
These yants can be seen if you look carefully—etched with intent, not stamped.
✨ Effects & Purpose
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Strong Seneh Pull – Especially effective for emotional attraction, sympathy, influence over others
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Wealth Flow – These spirits naturally attract opportunities and financial blessings to their bonded caretaker
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Karmic Bond – Carrying one allows you to generate merit for spirits who otherwise have no path forward
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Spiritual Movement – The spirit inside is not aggressive, but active, watchful, and eager to serve
⚠️ Rarity and Weight
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Only about 20 pieces exist, each from a different body, each treated individually
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Small in size (approx. 1 inch) but heavy in spiritual and physical mass (20–30 grams) due to the coffin nail casting
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No modern Ajarn replicates this Burmese-rooted ritual anymore—this was a spiritual act of preservation, not a product release
🧿 Final Thoughts
This is not a piece for everyone.
It is for those who work with prai, understand the weight of spiritual responsibility, and know that not all blessings come from light.
This is a relic of compassion, pain, and mastery—a portal for the forgotten to become guardians.

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