Thank you for sharing your knowledge, I have been drawn to the Buddhas in the mantra for such a long time ,but I don’t have any knowledge about it so thank you for sharing your knowledge with the world . 🙏🏼 namaste📿
Hi, Rose, I hope this was helpful! The most important thing with mantras like these is to start using them and see the effect on your mind. The mantras are very blessed, so you can't do it "wrong." 💜
Adamus St. Germain is stalking me! He stalks me like a P S Y C H O P A T H ! P S Y C H O P A T H ! He uses MY body in a DISGUSTING way! I am TORTURED, abused / mentally and physically, although these words have too narrow a scope and do not reflect the range of situations that I have experienced and still experience. It is not my words or body sensations that are being thrown at me, I feel like I am on a leash, not myself.... etc. He stalks me like a P S Y C H O P A T H !
Thank you so much for creating this content. I’ve been looking for a way to start my journey to learning Buddhism but I live in a place where there aren’t any temples.. So your channel is so great to start from. Thank you 🙏🏻❤️💫
You're most welcome! I was in your situation once, too, and that's a big part of my motivation for putting out these videos: so people don't have to feel alone as they start practicing the dharma. 💜🥰
Hi, Jonathan, thanks for that suggestion! Maybe I'll add a "translation" into the video -- but the idea of a mantra is less that it has a meaning or a translation and more that the syllables themselves carry the energy of the buddhas they invoke. When Westerners first came into contact with Asian Buddhist cultures, they were really focused on translations, so some mantras have been "translated," like OM MANI PADME HUNG can mean something like "the jewel is in the lotus," but it leaves out the OM and the HUNG, which are key parts of the mantra. Is that helpful?
@@ClaireVillarreal very helpful! Since the comment I left, I had looked up the translations. I don't do the chants in English, I do them as you put them on here, but find that it helps me greatly to have an idea of what it is that I'm chanting. Through your video, I learned about Tara and have been reading about her and believe that I will include a statue of her as I put my shrine together. Thank you for this video and thank you for your response! Blessings!
be here now do no harm help others be still close eyes listen to your breathing. om amidewa hri: om mani peme hung: om a hung benza guru pema siddhi hung: om chale chule chunde so ha: hung mama hung ni so ha: om benza kili kilaye hung peh.
I'm starting my life as a buddhist due to anxiety. I have been meditating some but I havent even gotten my mala beads yet and I'm wanting the bodhi seed ones. I am also into guatama Buddha's teachings from Hinduism.
Hi! Thank you for making this video! I needed some stress relief mantras and I wanted to know the translations and you delivered! I hope you're doing well.
Hi, trans_witch, that one is wonderful, too! I feel less comfortable talking about "namo amida butsu" because I've never really practiced in the Pure Land traditions, and I don't want to mischaracterize someone else's practice. But I respect Pure Land practices a lot and love knowing that thousands or millions of people are chanting that mantra at any given moment. 💜
Mantras are very beneficial. We chant mantras because they are short, simple & easy to remember or memorize. In short, a simple way to explain this is that chanting mantras with faith and a clear, focused mind will help us develop compassion, be able to control our minds, earn merits, and abolish our karma.
Well, mantras in Buddhism are always in Sanskrit, and often they don't really have a translation. But you might be able to find some in translation -- probably the Heart Sutra? Good luck 🙏
Can I practice it without initiation from realised person? And can I practice it in my bedroom as I have a very small house and not much of space.? I would be very grateful if you could reply please.Thanks.
Hi, udennyn, these three mantras are very popular, and you'll benefit from practicing with them, even without an initiation. From a Tibetan perspective, they carry blessings -- and if you eventually have the chance to receive an initiation, all the better. :) And yes! You can practice mantras anywhere, anytime! Of course, it's helpful to have a small spot that you use just for meditation, but if that's not available, a comfortable seat is fine. You can even lie on your bed and mentally recite mantras before you fall asleep to refresh and relax your mind. The most important thing with mantra practice, as with any kind of meditation, is to put it into practice and see what happens. 💜🙏
Awesome! My home sangha, Dawn Mountain, offers wangs online sometimes and has retreats you can take by video and get the equivalent of a wang. You can check them out at dawnmountain.org and get on the mailing list. They a couple of online retreats coming up this spring. 🤩
Hi, Magickology, this mantra can be transliterated in a couple of different ways into English ("hung" or "hum"), and the Sanskrit-style pronunciation is "om mani padme hum", while the Tibetan is "om mani peme hum/hung," as you wrote. So there are several different "right" spelling and pronunciation combos possible. 😜
Thank you -- and the Medicine Buddha is wonderful! I've never actually done that practice, so I figured I'd leave that one to someone better qualified than I am to share it. Do you know a video on the Medicine Buddha mantra you'd recommend?
@@ClaireVillarreal definitely... my absolute favourite version is called Teyata on the Samsara Boulevard channel. i also really like the Medicine Buddha Mantra (with words) on the channel called adeline108, and also by Drukmo Gyal, she has a video on her channel where she explains the mantra and how to use it and then sings it, its called "Tibetan Mantra Healing | Medcine Buddha Mantra | Drukmo Gyal" on her channel. really beautiful.
Great question! To get a little technical, it's a retroflex "m" in Sanskrit, which can be transliterated as either "m" or "ng." Tibetans pronounce it both of those ways, so I'm following their tradition. 😜
This video is about three Tibetan Buddhist mantras for beginners [1]. This video was uploaded by a UA-cam user named Claire Villaréal [1]. This video has 41841 views and 1235 likes [1]. This video is 10 minutes and 55 seconds long [1]. This video was uploaded on May 13, 2021 [1]. In this video, Claire shares three Tibetan Buddhist mantras that you can use without a deep understanding of Buddhism [1]. She also explains how to use these mantras and why you might want to use them [1]. The three mantras that Claire shares are: * The mantra of Avalokiteshvara, the Buddha of compassion [1]. * The mantra of Amitabha, the Buddha of infinite light [1]. * The mantra of Tara, the female Buddha of compassion [1]. Claire explains how each of these mantras can be used to help yourself during difficult times [1]. She also explains how these mantras can be used to create a deeper connection with your inner self [1]. If you are looking for a way to add spirituality to your life, this video is a great starting point [1]. Claire does a good job of explaining the topic and providing practical advice [1].
I love the green tara mantra, so thank you for teaching us. I'll look up the songs for that. Do buddhists ever say om namah shivaaya? or is that specifically hindu?
That's Shiva's mantra, so Buddhists don't use it. But as I see it, all great wisdom beings have the capacity to help us spiritually. If that mantra resonates with you, that's wonderful. And you can't go wrong with Green Tara, either. 💚
Hi, Kirk, it depends on the tradition and even the teacher within a given tradition. In some Zen traditions, everyone wears a robe; in my lineage of Tibetan Buddhism, we laypeople are encouraged to wear the upper robe (sen) when we're practicing or receiving teachings. Are you part of a Buddhist community? If you are, you could ask your teachers or senior students about what's typical in your sangha.
@@kirkbest3238 Well, there's always the option of having a special piece of clothing that you only wear when you practice, even if it's not a robe per se, like a shawl or scarf. When I traveled in India 20 years ago, people would wear warm shawls the way we in the US wear a jacket, so I started doing the same thing. (But then quickly stopped once I got home.)
There's not a practice section in this video, but there's a guided Green Tara practice in this one: ua-cam.com/video/K7oI9suIeXg/v-deo.html Maybe I should add a link to this video. 🤔
Luckily for is then that most of these mantras have easily accessible translations. Plus that ultimately for many mantras act as a method of focus, like watching a candle flame to calm the mind!
Well, there are translated mantras, but many traditional cultures and groups don't translate mantras from the original language they were spoken. They do this so nothing is "lost in translation" and the mantras hold the exact same meaning and power from when they were originally said. Direct translations don't always make the same sense, or certain words or phrases don't translate
This video is about three Tibetan Buddhist mantras for beginners [1]. This video was uploaded by a UA-cam user named Claire Villaréal [1]. This video has 41841 views and 1235 likes [1]. This video is 10 minutes and 55 seconds long [1]. This video was uploaded on May 13, 2021 [1]. In this video, Claire shares three Tibetan Buddhist mantras that you can use without a deep understanding of Buddhism [1]. She also explains how to use these mantras and why you might want to use them [1]. The three mantras that Claire shares are: * The mantra of Avalokiteshvara, the Buddha of compassion [1]. * The mantra of Amitabha, the Buddha of infinite light [1]. * The mantra of Tara, the female Buddha of compassion [1]. Claire explains how each of these mantras can be used to help yourself during difficult times [1]. She also explains how these mantras can be used to create a deeper connection with your inner self [1]. If you are looking for a way to add spirituality to your life, this video is a great starting point [1]. Claire does a good job of explaining the topic and providing practical advice [1].
Hey Claire thanks for this video!!! Super informative and I subscribed excited to see more
Thanks, Emily, any particular topic you'd like to see next?
I just started my journey recently as well good luck on your path friend 👍
Thank you Claire , I m Buddhist from New Delhi,India.
Prashant Sutail, I'm so glad you enjoyed it! I've visited New Delhi several times, amazing city! 🤩💜
OM MANI PADME HUNG
OM AMI DEVA HRI
OM TARE TUTTARE TURE SOHA
Wow,! Great video Houston Texas here lol🐲☸️☮️☯️❤️😎🌍🇺🇸
Your channel is great. Thank you :)
Om amidewa hrih
Thank you for sharing your knowledge, I have been drawn to the Buddhas in the mantra for such a long time ,but I don’t have any knowledge about it so thank you for sharing your knowledge with the world . 🙏🏼 namaste📿
Hi, Rose, I hope this was helpful! The most important thing with mantras like these is to start using them and see the effect on your mind. The mantras are very blessed, so you can't do it "wrong." 💜
Thank you for taki g the time
You're most welcome. 🙏
Congratulation because you are blessed to have the opportunity to practice all these mantras!!! I’m so glad and happy for you!!
Ooi Wyin, it's so true. Thank you, and I hope you have the opportunity to practice with these mantras, too. 🙏
@@ClaireVillarreal thank you !
Adamus St. Germain is stalking me!
He stalks me like a P S Y C H O P A T H ! P S Y C H O P A T H !
He uses MY body in a DISGUSTING way!
I am TORTURED, abused / mentally and physically, although these words have too narrow a scope and do not reflect the range of situations that I have experienced and still experience.
It is not my words or body sensations that are being thrown at me, I feel like I am on a leash, not myself.... etc.
He stalks me like a P S Y C H O P A T H !
Thank you so much for creating this content. I’ve been looking for a way to start my journey to learning Buddhism but I live in a place where there aren’t any temples.. So your channel is so great to start from. Thank you 🙏🏻❤️💫
You're most welcome! I was in your situation once, too, and that's a big part of my motivation for putting out these videos: so people don't have to feel alone as they start practicing the dharma. 💜🥰
I am just starting out on the Buddhist path. I would love to know what these mantras mean, the translation of them... Blessings!
Hi, Jonathan, thanks for that suggestion! Maybe I'll add a "translation" into the video -- but the idea of a mantra is less that it has a meaning or a translation and more that the syllables themselves carry the energy of the buddhas they invoke. When Westerners first came into contact with Asian Buddhist cultures, they were really focused on translations, so some mantras have been "translated," like OM MANI PADME HUNG can mean something like "the jewel is in the lotus," but it leaves out the OM and the HUNG, which are key parts of the mantra. Is that helpful?
@@ClaireVillarreal very helpful! Since the comment I left, I had looked up the translations. I don't do the chants in English, I do them as you put them on here, but find that it helps me greatly to have an idea of what it is that I'm chanting. Through your video, I learned about Tara and have been reading about her and believe that I will include a statue of her as I put my shrine together. Thank you for this video and thank you for your response! Blessings!
@Jonathan Cobb, that's wonderful! Thanks so much for sharing. I have Tara on my shrine, too, and I hope she blesses your practice. 😍
Thanks Lot Lot Claire Mam.
Very nice video, thank you!
Such a helpful video ❤
Thanks
be here now do no harm help others be still close eyes listen to your breathing. om amidewa hri: om mani peme hung: om a hung benza guru pema siddhi hung: om chale chule chunde so ha: hung mama hung ni so ha: om benza kili kilaye hung peh.
I'm starting my life as a buddhist due to anxiety. I have been meditating some but I havent even gotten my mala beads yet and I'm wanting the bodhi seed ones. I am also into guatama Buddha's teachings from Hinduism.
Thank you for this video send prayers in written please.
You're most welcome -- and they're OM MANI PADME HUNG/HUM, OM TARE TUTTARE SOHA, and OM AMI DEVA HRI. 🙏
I would love to know more
....❤
Thank you. ❤
New to channel ,can you interpret in english what is being said in eeach mantra.Ty for this wonderful video.💛💚
Hi! Thank you for making this video! I needed some stress relief mantras and I wanted to know the translations and you delivered! I hope you're doing well.
I'm so glad this video was helpful. 💜🙏
Your heart is your temple♡😊
Thanks you. I have downloaded all three from UA-cam music so I can listen over and over.
Thank you for this very good explanation.
Looking forward to more videos related to buddhism.😇
Thank you, I'm so glad the video was helpful to you. 🙏💜
❤❤❤ Thank You
You are so welcome 💜
Thank you I am Buddhist I want the prayer in written Iam learning to use the holy beeds given .
Thanks for this video. I’m new to this. I was told I have to do 108 x 8 my life path number
Good luck, Queen Libra! Did you get a specific mantra to practice? And what's a life path number?
I thank you deeply for using a pure land Buddhist mantra in here as well.
Another one is "namo amida butsu".
- a pure land/tibetan Buddhist
Hi, trans_witch, that one is wonderful, too! I feel less comfortable talking about "namo amida butsu" because I've never really practiced in the Pure Land traditions, and I don't want to mischaracterize someone else's practice.
But I respect Pure Land practices a lot and love knowing that thousands or millions of people are chanting that mantra at any given moment. 💜
Wow
😎 Cool
I'm GREATFUL for finding your channel
Exactly
What I was searching for
Knowledge and wisdom about mantras
Thank you
Thank you, Tina Marie, I'm so glad this is helpful for you. 😊🙏
Algorithm ❤
Why do we chant mantras? How does this practice benefits the world and practitioners? Thank you for your teaching.
Mantras are very beneficial. We chant mantras because they are short, simple & easy to remember or memorize.
In short, a simple way to explain this is that chanting mantras with faith and a clear, focused mind will help us develop compassion, be able to control our minds, earn merits, and abolish our karma.
🙏🙏🙏
Very nice video thank you
Thank you, Shcerin 🙏🏻
I wish I could find more chants in English on UA-cam
Well, mantras in Buddhism are always in Sanskrit, and often they don't really have a translation. But you might be able to find some in translation -- probably the Heart Sutra?
Good luck 🙏
❤
Can I practice it without initiation from realised person? And can I practice it in my bedroom as I have a very small house and not much of space.? I would be very grateful if you could reply please.Thanks.
Hi, udennyn, these three mantras are very popular, and you'll benefit from practicing with them, even without an initiation. From a Tibetan perspective, they carry blessings -- and if you eventually have the chance to receive an initiation, all the better. :)
And yes! You can practice mantras anywhere, anytime! Of course, it's helpful to have a small spot that you use just for meditation, but if that's not available, a comfortable seat is fine. You can even lie on your bed and mentally recite mantras before you fall asleep to refresh and relax your mind.
The most important thing with mantra practice, as with any kind of meditation, is to put it into practice and see what happens. 💜🙏
@@ClaireVillarreal Thank you. 😊
@@udennyn you're most welcome. 🙏
Good
Thank you, @Astro Talk 💜🙏
I had no idea that a Wong could happen. I want to do this
Awesome! My home sangha, Dawn Mountain, offers wangs online sometimes and has retreats you can take by video and get the equivalent of a wang. You can check them out at dawnmountain.org and get on the mailing list. They a couple of online retreats coming up this spring. 🤩
VERY NICE THANK YOU ❤️✨ ❤️✨
Thank you, Ang Kami Sherpa, I'm so glad the video is helpful to you. 🙏💜
Avalokitesvara's mantra is in tibetan "om mani pemme hung". Pronounced/spelt slightly differently than what you wrote in the vid description.
Hi, Magickology, this mantra can be transliterated in a couple of different ways into English ("hung" or "hum"), and the Sanskrit-style pronunciation is "om mani padme hum", while the Tibetan is "om mani peme hum/hung," as you wrote. So there are several different "right" spelling and pronunciation combos possible. 😜
@@ClaireVillarreal this answers a question I left on your video about malas.
wow, i love your energy. i think you are only missing Medicine Buddha!
Thank you -- and the Medicine Buddha is wonderful! I've never actually done that practice, so I figured I'd leave that one to someone better qualified than I am to share it.
Do you know a video on the Medicine Buddha mantra you'd recommend?
@@ClaireVillarreal definitely... my absolute favourite version is called Teyata on the Samsara Boulevard channel. i also really like the Medicine Buddha Mantra (with words) on the channel called adeline108, and also by Drukmo Gyal, she has a video on her channel where she explains the mantra and how to use it and then sings it, its called "Tibetan Mantra Healing | Medcine Buddha Mantra | Drukmo Gyal" on her channel. really beautiful.
If I'm not wrong it's om mani padme hum.. or it's om mani pame hung???
Great question! To get a little technical, it's a retroflex "m" in Sanskrit, which can be transliterated as either "m" or "ng." Tibetans pronounce it both of those ways, so I'm following their tradition. 😜
Om mani padme hum
This video is about three Tibetan Buddhist mantras for beginners [1]. This video was uploaded by a UA-cam user named Claire Villaréal [1]. This video has 41841 views and 1235 likes [1]. This video is 10 minutes and 55 seconds long [1]. This video was uploaded on May 13, 2021 [1].
In this video, Claire shares three Tibetan Buddhist mantras that you can use without a deep understanding of Buddhism [1]. She also explains how to use these mantras and why you might want to use them [1].
The three mantras that Claire shares are:
* The mantra of Avalokiteshvara, the Buddha of compassion [1].
* The mantra of Amitabha, the Buddha of infinite light [1].
* The mantra of Tara, the female Buddha of compassion [1].
Claire explains how each of these mantras can be used to help yourself during difficult times [1]. She also explains how these mantras can be used to create a deeper connection with your inner self [1].
If you are looking for a way to add spirituality to your life, this video is a great starting point [1]. Claire does a good job of explaining the topic and providing practical advice [1].
I love the green tara mantra, so thank you for teaching us. I'll look up the songs for that.
Do buddhists ever say om namah shivaaya? or is that specifically hindu?
That's Shiva's mantra, so Buddhists don't use it. But as I see it, all great wisdom beings have the capacity to help us spiritually. If that mantra resonates with you, that's wonderful. And you can't go wrong with Green Tara, either. 💚
@@ClaireVillarreal Ok thanks so much
What robes can lay practicioners wear
Hi, Kirk, it depends on the tradition and even the teacher within a given tradition. In some Zen traditions, everyone wears a robe; in my lineage of Tibetan Buddhism, we laypeople are encouraged to wear the upper robe (sen) when we're practicing or receiving teachings.
Are you part of a Buddhist community? If you are, you could ask your teachers or senior students about what's typical in your sangha.
@@ClaireVillarreal I’m a Nichiren Buddhist we wear normal clothes
@@kirkbest3238 Well, there's always the option of having a special piece of clothing that you only wear when you practice, even if it's not a robe per se, like a shawl or scarf. When I traveled in India 20 years ago, people would wear warm shawls the way we in the US wear a jacket, so I started doing the same thing. (But then quickly stopped once I got home.)
@@ClaireVillarreal thanks I’ll look into it
I mean this genuinely, what is your training? Are you self taught? (Not a condemnation or anything just earnest curiosity)
Just for the algorithm
Lol, thanks, Morgan! 🙏😁
Is it ok to say all three on the same mala?
Yes, for sure! Unless you're doing some advanced practice, you can use one mala for everything. 💜
where's the chanting?
There's not a practice section in this video, but there's a guided Green Tara practice in this one: ua-cam.com/video/K7oI9suIeXg/v-deo.html
Maybe I should add a link to this video. 🤔
For bodhist beads (orginal ) contract me direct
nabin lama, where are you located?
@@ClaireVillarreal i am from nepal
I 💜 Nepal so much! Want to email me your info? Maybe we can collab. claire@clairevillarreal.com
@@ClaireVillarreal hi
I have a terrible voice for chatting (and singing). Used to be better
Nmrk
Are you Mariah Carey in disguise ?
Lol, no but that's a great idea for a channel! 😅
As a westerner, reciting mantras in a language we don't even understand is just a fashion fad.
Luckily for is then that most of these mantras have easily accessible translations.
Plus that ultimately for many mantras act as a method of focus, like watching a candle flame to calm the mind!
Well, there are translated mantras, but many traditional cultures and groups don't translate mantras from the original language they were spoken. They do this so nothing is "lost in translation" and the mantras hold the exact same meaning and power from when they were originally said. Direct translations don't always make the same sense, or certain words or phrases don't translate
American words do not hold the same Vibrations, which can change the use
This video is about three Tibetan Buddhist mantras for beginners [1]. This video was uploaded by a UA-cam user named Claire Villaréal [1]. This video has 41841 views and 1235 likes [1]. This video is 10 minutes and 55 seconds long [1]. This video was uploaded on May 13, 2021 [1].
In this video, Claire shares three Tibetan Buddhist mantras that you can use without a deep understanding of Buddhism [1]. She also explains how to use these mantras and why you might want to use them [1].
The three mantras that Claire shares are:
* The mantra of Avalokiteshvara, the Buddha of compassion [1].
* The mantra of Amitabha, the Buddha of infinite light [1].
* The mantra of Tara, the female Buddha of compassion [1].
Claire explains how each of these mantras can be used to help yourself during difficult times [1]. She also explains how these mantras can be used to create a deeper connection with your inner self [1].
If you are looking for a way to add spirituality to your life, this video is a great starting point [1]. Claire does a good job of explaining the topic and providing practical advice [1].