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Product Description
\"Liuli\" refers to ancient Chinese glass/crystal. Its history dates back thousands of years, first emerging around the 11th century BC.
The raw materials for this glassware are silicates and metallic oxides that are abundant in nature. After being melted at high temperatures, they are made into rods of various sizes, then softened over a flame before being handcrafted into the final product. Unlike glaze, Liuli artworks have no molds, and each piece is unique as it's the improvisational work of craftsmen. Compared to glass, Liuli artworks have a lower melting point, resulting in more vibrant colors. Creating perfect glassware requires both good skills and a bit of luck.
Vajra
♥ Enlightenment ♥ Spiritual Power ♥ Strength ♥
The Vajra is a five-pronged ritual item used in Tibetan Buddhist ceremonies. It symbolizes the properties of a diamond (indestructibility) and a thunderbolt (irresistible force). As a symbol of a diamond, the Vajra represents indestructibility as diamonds are the hardest stones. As a symbol of a thunderbolt, it represents an irresistible force and the ability to cut through ignorance, as in mythology, the god Indra uses this weapon to defeat the ignorant.
The Vajra is the weapon of the Indian Vedic rain and thunder deity, and is symbolically used in the dharma traditions of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism to represent firmness of spirit and spiritual power.
In the tantric traditions of Buddhism, the Vajra symbolizes the nature of reality, or sunyata, indicating endless creativity, potency, and skillful action.
In practice, the Vajra (symbolizing the male principle, action ability) is held in the right hand, and the bell (symbolizing the female principle, intelligence) in the left hand. The interaction of the two ultimately leads to enlightenment.

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