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Por Sala Tan
Por Sala Tan
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Summary
This Lersi figure by Por Sala Tan belongs to the same long-form consecration lineage as the earlier Mai Payoom batch, but with a different focal relic. Instead of a Jindamani mala, this piece is vested with a nang suer robe relic that was worn and used by an actual Lersi sermingpai practitioner. The function of this version leans strongly toward guidance, command of esoteric currents, and refined seneh, making it a working piece rather than a symbolic one.
Historical Background
In forest and Lersi lineages, not all ritual tools are passed down equally. Items worn repeatedly during active practice—especially robes—are regarded as extensions of the practitioner’s field. Such pieces absorb posture, intent, discipline, and directional force accumulated over years of use. When integrated into Lersi images, these relics were historically reserved for practitioners engaged in advanced or non-orthodox paths requiring control, precision, and authority over unseen domains.
Origins of Materials
The body of the image is carved from Mai Payoom, a dense sacred ironwood selected for its stability and ability to retain long-term energetic imprint. The robe component is a nang suer used directly by a Lersi sermingpai practitioner during active workings. This robe relic carries both command presence and attraction current, making it especially suitable for Lersi images focused on guidance and influence rather than ascetic withdrawal.
Additional internal components follow the same lineage standard as the original batch, including preserved relic matter from past Lersis personally overseen by Por Sala Tan during their final rites.
Ritual
The consecration followed the established long-form structure of this Mai Payoom Lersi series. The carving was done under Por Sala Tan’s supervision, after which relics were integrated progressively rather than all at once. The robe relic was attached in the later phase, once the Lersi presence had stabilised within the image.
A handwritten takrut scroll with Por Sala Tan’s personal invocations and directional yant was inserted at the base to anchor lineage connection and maintain behavioural discipline of the piece. Final blessings were carried out across multiple cave ceremonies, using grounding and fixing rites rather than amplification-focused rituals.
Blessings & Effects
The primary blessing is guidance in advanced or shadow-adjacent paths, where clarity of direction matters more than speed. The presence of the nang suer robe introduces refined seneh, influencing perception, respect, and receptivity from others without overt force.
This piece strengthens decision-making under pressure, enhances command over complex interpersonal or organisational dynamics, and supports practitioners working with esoteric disciplines that require steadiness and control. The authority expressed is quiet but firm, often felt before it is consciously recognised.
Modern Application
Suitable for senior practitioners, leaders, consultants, and individuals operating in environments involving hidden structures, negotiations, or influence-based outcomes. It is also appropriate for those pursuing disciplined esoteric study who require guidance without volatility. This is not a casual piece and is best kept by users with clear intent and restraint.
Physical Details
Hand-carved Lersi figure in Mai Payoom wood. Fitted with an authentic nang suer robe relic worn by a Lersi sermingpai practitioner. Internal structure includes relic matter and a handwritten takrut scroll at the base. Sealed casing for long-term preservation.
Recommended Pairing
Pairs well with metta-focused or soft seneh pieces to moderate authority and enhance approachability. For users engaged in leadership or advisory roles, pairing with a baramee-generating image such as Somdej or Prah Kring helps stabilise influence while maintaining ethical grounding.

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