Color Challenge Saturday Indigo - "THE MALA" ~ © Tiffany E. Reed

in #colorchallenge7 years ago (edited)

The art of threading beads onto string goes back to antiquity, thousands of years ago. One website, the Venetian Bead Shop reports: "Beads have been made of glass for over 5,000 years. The discovery of fire was the essential step in glass bead making. There is evidence as early as 2340-2180 BC in Mesopotamia..."

That, alone might be surprising enough, but Wikipedia says, "A pair of beads made from Nassarius sea snail shells, approximately 100,000 years old, are thought to be the earliest known examples of jewellery." The article continues:

Beads are known to be one of the earliest forms of trade between the human race. It is thought that is because of bead trading that humans developed language. Beads are said to have been used and traded for most of our history. The oldest beads found to date were at Ksar Akil, in Lebanon. Prior to this find, the beads found in the Blombos Cave were the oldest at about 72,000 years old.

Besides using beads as currency for trade or jewelry, another common use is making strings of beads as meditative tools by several different cultures and religions. It is thought that "strings of prayer beads originated in India, where yogins and yoginis were using what is still the standard Hindu mala (literally "rose" or "garland") before the 8th century BCE." source.

In ancient India, the mala was used in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhism in a practice called japa. From there, the use of such beads spread to the Muslim world as the misbaha, and eventually into rosary of the Christians. They have also been used as secular "worry beads"/kompoloi in the Greek and Cypriot cultures.

I have used malas in my spiritual practice for over forty years. My first set of prayer beads was given to me as a gift, and I have been hooked on them ever since! They are comforting to hold in the hand, and the endless styles and colors are fascinating to me. Some are made from wooden beads and some from seeds from various trees and plants (raktu, rudraksha, tulsi, and others). The mala shown at right is one of mine, and made from raktu seeds strung onto a traditional red mala thread. Some malas are fashioned from the bone from deceased animals, as a reminder of the impermanence of life. Some beads are carved from semi-precious stones. Some mala beads are carved or polished to be round, and some are carved into intricate shapes or with designs carved into the round beads. My collection includes several that I purchased over the years as well as some that I have made, myself!

The lovely mala pictured below is one that I purchased, made from lapis lazuli stones. I have seen some people wearing such malas as a necklace, or winding them around their wrists like a bracelet. I think that is an acceptable practice, and have done so, myself, as long as they are actually used for their intended purposes.

mala-1.jpg

In the religions of the Indian subcontinent where the mala originated, mantras (short prayers) are usually recited as the devotee moves from bead-to-bead. According to a Muslim friend of mine, the Misbaha is used to recite a litany of titles attributed to Diety. In the Christian rosary, a specific system of prayers are recited on various beads.

However, the mala can also be used to recite affirmations of any sort that one feels useful, even by those who do not follow a spiritual path. ("I am healthy, happy, and in control," etc.) The whole point of repetition is to lull the user into a meditative/contemplative state. Whatever one does with them, though, is up to the creativity of the individual. I often sleep with one of my malas in my hand — it feels comforting, and gives me something relaxing to do should I have difficulty falling asleep.

mala-2.jpg

If there is enough interest in this post, I will be happy to do a second post on malas in the future, with more photos of some of the other malas in my collection!

~all writing and photos in this post are by me~

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This is another entry in the ColorChallenge which @kalemandra began. It's been such fun participating in it each day since I've been here!

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@thekittygirl this post was presented at the most recent Pimp Your Post Thursday on the Steemit Ramble Discord. I have written a post to share your featured post. Just stopping back to let you know that you can see your name in lights right here. (Just kidding about the lights :)

Thank you so much! 😊

Taking the color challenge to a whole other level. Amazing work, you truly post quality post. Other should look at you as an example :)

awwww... THANK YOU so much for that wonderful compliment! 😊

Beautiful pics @thekittygirl
Yes its believed to have good effects
I have rudraksha mala, i feel calm in its presence

ooooooh, Rudraksha malas are very special! How wonderful!
Thank you for the lovely comment! 😊

I'm familiar with Brock's string for vision therapy, yes pretty relaxing haha

Okay, I had to look that up, as I've never heard of Brock's string! LOL!

Thanks for sharing your post on Pimp Your Post Thursday.

https://discord.gg/KP2tNq4

Thank you! I am glad you shared about your beads, too! That was awesome! 😊

I also have a Beads
I suffer from ADHD and it helps me a lot to Stay focused.

That is such an awesome use for beads! Very clever, and I am glad you have them! 😊
Thank you for sharing that!

Thank you for the great post

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Your quality post caught my attention and I hope you benefit from my resteem. My followers have a refined appreciation for quality art. You might also enjoy my curated collection. To see the quality posts I have curated via resteem, see my blog @pixresteemer. If you want to know more about me and my mission, please check my introduction.

Thank you for the resteem! 😊

What a great post! Really nicely researched and cited, and your photography is professional quality! Yes please, another mala post would be great :) There definitely is a very meditative, almost hypnotic effect, to repeating a mantra while fingering beads.

Much love - Carl "Totally Not A Bot" Gnash




@carlgnash from the @humanbot Human Certified Original Works Initiative has manually determined this post to be the original and truly creative work of the post author.

Learn more:
https://steemit.com/curation/@carlgnash/what-human-certified-original-works-means-to-me-a-totally-unofficial-mission-statement-from-just-one-person-in-a-decentralized

Thanks for being an original and creative content creator! You rock!

I am very grateful for your stopping by, your generous upvote, and the fabulous comment!
Your words make me happy, especially the comment on my photography!
THANK YOU so very much! 😊

Yes it really is a calming thing to do to work with beads. Your raktu seed mala is wonderful work and I also love the color of the one you purchased.

Thank you so much for that lovely comment! 😊

Lovely lapis beads! I have several malas that have been gifts, or that I have purchased in my travels. I would love to see more of yours! Congrats on being recognized by @appreciator 🆙 #steemitbloggers

Thank you so very much, lady! I appreciate your lovely comment, and would love to see some of your malas, too, if you feel motivated to make a post about them some day! 😊

I don't have anything as beautiful as yours!!

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