OOBThaiAmulets
Por Sala Tan
Por Sala Tan
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Summary
A compact 1-inch takien wood image carved by Por Sala Tan for his neighbor who sold lottery tickets. Structured for steady side income, sales movement, and household stability. Blessed through a merit-making rite incorporating lukrop powder. Suitable for retail counters, office desks, and live-selling environments. Pairs well with baramee pieces to strengthen presence and continuity of wealth flow.
Historical Background
This piece was created for a neighbor of Por Sala Tan who earned a living selling lottery tickets. In those years, unsold tickets sometimes carried winning numbers. The financial strain of holding leftover tickets could weigh heavily on a small household.
Understanding the uncertainty of sales-based income, Por Sala Tan carved this small takien image to stabilise the family’s earnings. The intention was clear: allow income to circulate smoothly, reduce loss from unsold stock, and ensure the home remained supported even when sales were unpredictable.
It was not made as a display object. It was made for practical livelihood support within a working household.
Origins of the Material
The material is mai takien sourced directly by Por Sala Tan. He was known to gather logs personally whenever they were within reach of his residence. If a fallen tree or usable timber was not far from home, he would transport it back, cut it, and store it for future ritual use.
Some pieces were carved into amulets. Others were reserved for fire rites. Takien wood was part of his working environment and daily ritual structure. This particular carving comes from that stock—wood selected, stored, and handled by him over time.
The base reflects long-term storage and natural aging from his compound.
Ritual
The consecration followed a merit-making format using lukrop powder. The ritual focus was not forceful invocation but accumulation and redirection of karmic support.
Lukrop powder was incorporated to stabilise intention and anchor the blessing toward livelihood and household continuity. The rite aligned the piece with daily earning activities—sales, small transactions, and incremental wealth accumulation.
The blessing was practical and grounded. It addressed daily bread, not abstraction.
Blessings and Effects
The core function is side wealth—income that supplements primary earnings. It supports sales-based work, particularly where inventory risk exists.
It strengthens turnover. It encourages movement of goods. It stabilises household income and supports protection of the living space.
For those operating small businesses, it helps maintain customer flow and transactional consistency.
Modern Application
In today’s context, this piece fits naturally in retail shops, on office desks, inside cash drawers, or near live-selling setups. It supports contracts, sales negotiations, and steady conversion of leads into revenue.
For home-based entrepreneurs, it can remain near workspaces to anchor consistent earning cycles. The structure remains aligned with commerce and household protection.
Physical Details
Approximately 1 inch in height.
Compact and suitable for desk placement, wallet carry, or small casing display.
Surface shows age consistent with stored takien wood and long-term handling.
Recommended Pairing
Pairs effectively with baramee-oriented pieces to strengthen authority and overall presence while maintaining wealth flow.
Together, the structure balances income movement with personal standing.

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