OOBThaiAmulets
Por Sala Tan
Por Sala Tan
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Summary
This Mai Sak is a ritual inscription tool personally used by Por Sala Tan during his mature period of practice. Carved in the form of a devotional Lersi, it functioned as a sacred instrument for inscribing yants onto wood, bone, and metal surfaces—including yantra sheets and medallions. Beyond its technical use, the piece serves as a spiritual intermediary, enabling prayers, wishes, and accumulated merit to be transmitted across realms. Today, it is venerated on altars as a conduit for wish-granting, merit dedication, and invocation of ancestral Lersi lineages.
Historical Background
This Mai Sak originates from the same solitary cave retreat period in Fang during which Por Sala Tan undertook extended meditative seclusion. During this phase, his practice had reached full stability—marked by controlled trance, disciplined astral perception, and refined ritual function.
While earlier accounts associated similar objects with ritual blades, this specific piece was never intended as a cutting implement. Instead, it was shaped and consecrated as a precision ritual stylus—used to transmit intention into physical matter through yant inscription. The form chosen was that of a devotional Lersi, representing the lineage of ascetic masters who act as intermediaries between human vows and higher realms.
Following years of active ritual use, the Mai Sak was entrusted to a household in Fang for altar placement and ongoing veneration. It later returned to Ac Lek, son and direct student of Por Sala Tan, who safeguarded it with the master’s remaining working implements.
Origins of the Material
The body of the Mai Sak was carved from sacred bone material selected during ritual preparation, chosen for its stability in holding intent and script. Bone tools of this type are traditionally reserved for inscription work rather than cutting, as they allow precise transmission of yant geometry without dispersing ritual charge.
The pointed tip was deliberately shaped to accommodate multiple materials—wood panels, bone relics, and metal yantra plates—allowing the same instrument to be used across different ritual contexts without dilution of lineage.
Ritual Function and Consecration
This Mai Sak was not mass-consecrated. It was activated through repeated personal use by Por Sala Tan during inscription rites. Each yant inscribed using this tool reinforced its accumulated authority.
The carved Lersi form functions ritually as an emissary figure. During invocation, the practitioner calls upon the ancestral Lersi lineage to act as carriers—receiving prayers, wishes, and merit, and transmitting them upward to the appropriate realms.
When placed on an altar, the Mai Sak continues this function passively, serving as a standing channel rather than a dormant object.
Blessings and Effects
The primary effects of this Mai Sak are devotional and intercessory in nature. It supports wish-granting through correct prayer, assists in directing merit to both the living and the deceased, and facilitates communication with past Lersi masters aligned to the practitioner’s intent.
It is also used to stabilize ritual environments, ensuring that inscriptions performed with it carry clarity, authority, and continuity rather than fragmentation of intent.
Modern Application
In contemporary use, this Mai Sak is placed on a dedicated altar and venerated during prayer, wish-making, and merit dedication. Practitioners employ it when seeking acceptance of vows, transmission of prayers to higher realms, or dedication of accumulated boon to ancestors, teachers, or unresolved spirits.
For those engaged in ritual craft, it remains suitable for active inscription work—particularly for yants intended to bless, protect, or stabilize rather than command or sever.
Physical Details
The Mai Sak measures approximately nine inches in length. One end is finely tapered to a sharp point for inscription, while the upper section features a carved devotional Lersi figure. The surface bears ritual markings accumulated through use rather than decorative engraving. The overall form reflects function, lineage, and continuity of practice.
Recommended Pairing
This Mai Sak pairs well with altar-based devotional items, ancestral tablets, or relics associated with merit dedication. It is especially effective when used alongside objects representing lineage transmission—such as teacher relics or ritual texts—where its role as a messenger and conduit can be fully expressed.

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