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Por Sala Tan

Por Sala Tan

Regular price $725.00 SGD
Regular price Sale price $725.00 SGD
Sale Sold out

Meed Mor Hua Mongkon – Dragon-Headed Ritual Blade Gifted to Por Sala Tan

Made from Gwaang Relics | Hand-Carved by Cambodian Lersi Por Gae Dam | 253X Ubon Ceremony Artifact


This is not a commercial meed mor—it is a true ceremonial relic, created for sacred use and gifted directly to Por Sala Tan by Lersi Por Gae Dam of Cambodia, one of the most elusive forest hermits of the Ubon Ratchathani region. A unique dragon-headed ritual knife, this piece was not sold or circulated, and carries spiritual, historical, and artistic value beyond typical talismans.


🐉 Origin & Ceremony

This blade was crafted and gifted during a joint ceremony in Ubon Ratchathani, circa B.E. 253X, where a batch of holy water (nam mon) was being blessed for distribution to several rural temples across Thailand and Cambodia.
Por Sala Tan was invited not as a monk, but as a skilled ritual facilitator and spiritual technician. During this ceremony, Lersi Por Gae Dam personally handed over this meed mor, saying it would anchor dragon energy and baramee into Por Sala Tan’s altar lineage.


🔍 Artifact Breakdown

  • Handle:
    Carved in the shape of a Hua Mongkon (Great Dragon Head)—a water-based mythical serpent known to bring rain, fertility, and abundance. The features are finely detailed, with scaled texture and open maw signifying energy release and guardianship.
    Material: Gwaang relic (aged ivory substitute from forest relic sources)—ethically sourced material used by forest Lersi when working with ancestral animal energy.

  • Blade:
    Forged and ritual-etched by a reclusive Lersi living deep in Isaan, who only emerges for ceremonies and communicates entirely via meditative transmission.
    The yantra etched on the blade channels protective force, wealth attraction, and aura dominance. This yan is not written—it is called forth.

  • Fitting:
    The collar between blade and hilt is done in an aged brass alloy, oxidized naturally over time—evidence of long-term altar placement.


🧭 Function & Use

This meed mor was never used in combat or negative ritual. It is a household baramee anchor, and its energy is meant to:

  • Draw in wealth through the flow of water element (symbolized by the naga/dragon)

  • Protect the home, especially from spiritual intrusions or gossip

  • Uplift the home’s spiritual field, especially when placed at high points such as:

    • Main altar

    • Meditation table

    • Shelf facing doorways or windows

Por Sala Tan specifically said this piece does not need activation—it is “always watching, always coiled, always working.”


🖼️ Collector’s Note

Due to the beauty and symbolism of the dragon head, this piece also serves well as a spiritual art object. If mounted on a custom wooden or stone stand, it becomes a conversation piece that speaks of hidden power, spiritual discipline, and sacred alliance.

It is one of the few known relic blades made from gwaang and personally tied to both Por Sala Tan and a Cambodian Lersi—a rare cross-cultural lineage.

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