General Glossary

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Altar/shrine
The altar or shrine is the location of the symbolic representations of the body, speech, and mind of the buddhas as well as the offerings to them, such as offering bowls. The altar or shrine is usually in the same location where meditation practice is done and is clean, dignified, and elevated.

Bell
Skt. ghaṇṭa; Tib. དྲིལ་བུ་ dril-bu, is an important ritual implement in Vajrayana practices. The bell is always accompanied by a vajra (dorje) and symbolizes the wisdom of emptiness (feminine aspect) while the vajra symbolizes compassion and skillful means (masculine aspect). The number of spokes of the vajra and bell set, commonly five or nine, should be identical in style and number.

Bodhisattva
Skt. bodhisattva; Tib. བྱང་ཆུབ་སེམས་དཔའ་, jang-chub-sem-pa, "Those who seek buddhahood for the welfare of all beings are bodhisattva, awakened ones who dispel delusion in each moment by awareness and thus benefit others...'bodhisattva' can be translated as, "one of heroic mind who follows the path of purification and altruistic intention to benefit others." - Chagdud Khadro, The Red Tara Commentary.

Buddha
Skt. buddha; Tib. སངས་རྒྱས་ sang-gyay, is a title referring to a completely enlightened being; one who has revealed endless wisdom and compassion as well as the unhindered power to benefit sentient beings. The words buddha and deity (Tib. ལྷ་ lha) in the Vajrayana tradition are often synonymous. ‘Buddha’ can also refer to Shakyamuni Buddha, the Indian prince Gautama Siddhartha, who reached enlightenment in the sixth century B.C. In other contexts, ‘Buddha’ can refer to our intrinsic nature, or ‘buddha nature.’

Bumpa
Tib. བུམ་པ་ bum-pa, is a ritual vase filled with consecrated water infused with saffron. These vases have varying ritual functions in Vajrayana Buddhism such as cleansing, consecrating, and empowerment. They can be placed on the shrine, puja table, or at a lama's table depending on their use. They are adorned on top by a peacock feather (བུམ་སྒྲོ་) to which is attached a hollow wand that sprinkles water.

Bumpa Feather
Tib. བུམ་སྒྲོ་ bum-dro, is a peacock feather that adorns the top of a bumpa. Peacock feathers are a metaphor for the activity of a bodhisattva; peacocks transmute poisonous substances into the vibrant colors of their feathers and bodhisattvas transmute emotional defilements into wisdom.

Butterlamp
Tib. མར་མེ་ mar-me, a butterlamp (sometimes written butter-lamp) is an important way to accumulate merit and wisdom. The light of the lamp, as well as its nutritional oil, is offered to the buddhas with the wish that all beings be free from suffering and attain enlightenment; just as the light of a butterlamp dispels darkness, wisdom dispels the suffering of beings.

Chod Drum (chod damaru)
Tib. གཅོད་ཌར་ chod-dar, the 'chod drum' or 'chod damaru' is a ritual implement used in the practice of chod (Tib. གཅོད་). Chod practices are designed to cut through the belief in self – the root of all ignorance and deluded perceptions – by the meditation of offering one's own body. Chod was introduced into Tibet by the Indian siddha Padampa Sangyay and his principal disciple, Machig Labdrön. The chod drum is a double-sided pellet drum made of wood and typically measures between seven and sixteen inches in diameter. It is held in the right hand and is paired with a bell in the left hand and played in the manner of smaller handheld damaru. (See damaru).

Chuba
Tib. ཕྱུ་པ་ chu-ba, is a traditional Tibetan dress or skirt that has women's, men's, and unisex styles. A full chuba is a dress that covers the shoulders and extends to just below the knee or to the ankle. This type of chuba can be sleeveless or long-sleeved. A half-chuba is a meditation skirt that extends from the waist to the ankle. The unisex style of the half-chuba is a solid color and worn by lay practitioners, lamas, and monastics alike. Styles designed specifically for women can be made of multicolored and borcade fabrics. Chubas are tailored with pleats to allow for comfortable sitting while in cross-legged meditation posture.

Consort
The consort is inseparable from the principal deity and their unity represents the union of emptiness and skilful means/compassion. The consort is often depicted as a deity in sexual union with the principal deity or symbolically as a ritual implement such as a khatvanga. There is no spiritual difference between the principal deity and the consort.

Crossed Vajra
Skt. vishva-vajra; Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་རྒྱ་གྲམ་, dorje gyadram, or crossed vajra is formed from four lotus-mounted vajra-heads that emanate from a central hub towards the four cardinal directions, and symbolizes the principle of absolute stability. It is the symbolic hand-implement of Amoghasiddhi and other deities in the assembly of the peaceful and wrathful deities, and it is generally emblematic of buddha-activity.

Dakini (Khadro)
Skt. ḍākinī; Tib. མཁའ་འགྲོ་མ་, kha-dro-ma, on an outer level is a female embodiment of enlightened mind. ‘Khandro’ in Tibetan means ‘sky-goer,’ indicating one who traverses the sky-like expanse of wisdom. Dakinis can manifest in many different forms with playful, luminous, sharp intellectual, radical, and courageous qualities to benefit beings. On an inner level, the Vajrayana views the dakini is the most profound aspect of mind's natural awareness.

Damaru
Skt. ḍāmaru; Tib. ཌཱ་མ་རུ་ or རྔེའུ་ཆུང་ neu-chung, is a small double-sided handheld pellet drum. A damaru is in an hourglass shape that is often made of wood. When played the drum is grasped at the waist and twisted back and forth rhythmically sending the corded pellets against the outward facing drum heads. The damaru is held in the right hand when played, and is paired with the bell, held in the left hand.

Deity
Tib. ལྷ་ lha, is synonymous with ‘buddha’ in the Vajrayana tradition and refers to a completely enlightened being. Please note, deity is different from 'god' in that deities are enlightened beings, whereas gods are considered worldly beings with superior faculties.

Dorje
Skt. vajra; Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་ dorje, see 'vajra.'

Eight Auspicious Symbols
1) The Most Precious Parasol: protects from suffering, destructive emotions, illness, harm and obstacles; 2) The Auspicious Golden Fishes: the fearless unblinking eye of compassion, freedom and liberation, as well as happiness, fertility and abundance; 3) The Wish-fulfilling Vase of Treasure: an inexhaustible source of long life, wealth, and prosperity, which fulfils all one’s spiritual and material wishes; 4) The Exquisite Lotus Blossom: purity of mind and heart, and transformation, as well as compassion, and all perfect qualities; 5) The Conch of Fame and Glory: the far-reaching melodious sound of the spiritual teachings (a white conch shell coilng to the right); 6) The Glorious Endless Knot: the sign of interdependence; 7) The Ever-flying Banner of Victory: victory over all disagreement, disharmony or obstacles, and the attainment of happiness, both temporary and ultimate; 8) The All-powerful Wheel (wheel of doctrine): the teaching of Buddha, and is the source of spiritual values, wealth, love and liberation.

Four Activities
Sk. caturkarman; Tib. ལས་བཞི་ lay-zhi, are the activity categories by which beings of immense compassion benefit beings: pacifying, increasing, magnetizing, and wrathful (subjugating). The first two categories, pacifying and increasing, are common to all Buddhist schools, whereas the second two, magnetizing and wrathful, are found only in the Vajrayana tradition.

Gau
Tib. གའུ gau, is a Tibetan amulet or locket that contains holy relics, prayers, images, and other sacred substances. Smaller gau can be worn around the neck while larger ones are placed on shrines.

Incense
Tib. སྤོས་ pö. In the Tibetan tradition incense comes in small sticks or in powdered form. Incense is burned as an offering to the buddhas at a shrine or is displayed unburnt in one of the seven traditional offering bowls on a shrine. When burned it is usually placed into a incense box/censer. Tibetan and Bhutanese incenses are made of fine herbs with medicinal qualities and have excellent aromas.

Increasing/Enriching Activity
Tib. རྒྱས་པའི་ལས་ gyay-pai-lay, is one of the 'Four Activities.' Increasing or enriching activity brings the prosperity and longevity that creates positive conditions for the Buddhadharma to manifest and flourish; it also removes the poverty of beings to reduce their suffering. Buddhas that express this activity are associated with the color yellow. An example of this is the Buddha Ratnasambhava, and Dzambhala.

Kapala (Skull-cup) men & rakta
Skt. kapāla; Tib. ཐོད་པ་ tod-pa, a shrine should have a set of two kapala or skull cup: the left side filled with amrita (Skt. amṛta, Tib. སྨན་, men), and the right side filled with rakta (Skt. rakta, Tib. ཐོད་ཁྲག་, thod-t'hrag) – left and right are oriented towards your left and right as you face the shrine. The amrita kapala is a symbolic of the bliss of nonconceptual wisdom. The rakta kapala represents the conquering of the four maras. An amrita kapala can also be placed on a puja table for ritual and symbolic purposes.

Katag
Tib. ཁ་བཏགས་ katag, are scarfs that are used for a variety of ceremonial purposes such as holding incense, making offerings to a shrine, or for formal greeting of lamas and dharma teachers. As a greeting they are offered to the lama at the first meeting as a sign of respect. Most often the lama then returns the katag by placing it gently over the offeror's head and around their neck.

Katvanga
Skt. khaṭvāṅga; Tib. ཁ་ཊྭཱཾ་ག་ khatvanga, is a ritual trident that has historical roots in ancient India. In Vajrayana Buddhism the katvanga has complex symbolisms and in essence it symbolizes ultimate bodhicitta, the union of great bliss and emptiness. As a symbol for the consort it is held in the crook of the left arm.

Lanza Script
An ancient calligraphic form of Sanskrit that often adorns holy books and objects with mantra.

Long-life Vase
Tib. ཚེ་བུམ་ tse-bum, is an emblem held by Amitayus and Tara an in imbued with the qualities of immortality.

Lotus
Tib. པདྨ་ pad-ma, is a beautiful flower which grows from mud and is unstained by it. The lotus symbolizes our innate purity; though we are born as a suffering dualistic being, like the lotus we are ultimately unstained by these conditions; our nature is ultimately pure.

Magnetizing Activity
Tib. དབང་གི་ལས་ wang-gi-lay, is one of the 'Four Activities'. Magnetizing activity captivates and enchants beings in order to benefit them and turn their minds towards wisdom and virtue. Buddhas that express this activity are associated with the color red. Examples of this are Amitabha and Red Tara.

Mala
Skt. mala; Tib. འཕྲེང་བ་ treng-wa, is a rosary that consists of 108 or 111 beads and is used to count the recitation of mantra. The beads can be made of various substances such as crystal, lotus seed, wood, stone, coral, bodhi seed and more – each type of substance is thought to have a unique quality. A mala is usually held in the left hand when being used to count mantra recitations.

Mandala Pan
The mandala pan is a ritual pan/plate that is used in the practice of mandala offering – a practice of accumulating merit and wisdom for the benefit of others. Traditionally there are two kinds of mandalas: the accomplishment mandala, placed on the shrine as a support; and the offering mandala, used personally by the practitioner when making mandala offerings. As Patrul Rinpoche teaches, "The material out of which the mandala should be made depends on your means. The best kind of mandala base would be made of precious substances such as gold or silver. A medium quality one would be made of bell-metal or some other fine material. At worst, you could even use a smooth flat stone or piece of wood."

Mani Mantra
Refers to the mantra of Chenrezig, OM MANI PADME HUNG ཨོཾ་མ་ཎི་པདྨེ་ཧཱུྃ།

Mantra
Skt. mantra; Tib. སྔགས་, ngag, are sacred syllables used in Vajrayana practice to protect the minds of practitioners from negativity and ordinary impure perceptions. They also serve to invoke the yidam deities and their retinues.

Offering Bowls
Seven offering bowls and a butterlamp/light are arranged in a row on a shrine and offered daily to representations to the Three Jewels or the Buddha. The tradition of offering bowls comes from India and relates to the manner in which the ancient Indians would receive and honor a guest in their homes. The eight outer offerings are arranged in this order: water for drinking, water for washing, flowers, incense, a butterlamp/light, perfume, food, and music/sound. Offering bowls can also be used to make water offerings on a shrine.

P'hurba
Tib. ཕུར་པ་ p'hur-ba, is a ritual dagger with a pointed three-edge blade. The p’hurba is associated with wrathful activity, and is, for example, held by the deity Vajrakilaya, a buddha who embodies the quality of wrathful enlightened activity. A p'hurba can be placed on a shrine or be a meditation support on a puja table.

Pacifying Activity
Tib. ཞི་བའི་ལས་ zhi-wai-lay, is one of the 'Four Activities.' Pacifying activity brings benefit by calming the negativities of beings and soothing their sufferings. Buddhas that express this activity are associated with the color white. Examples of this are Chenrezig, Vajrasattva, and White Tara.

Prayer Flags
Tib. དར་ལྕོག་ dar-cho. Tibetan prayer flags come in various styles, most commonly as five alternating colored square cloths attached to a long strand; or a single piece attached along the length of a pole. Prayers, mantras, deities, auspicious symbols, and mystical animals are printed on each flag; and the colors blue, white, yellow, red, and green represent the Five Buddha Families or the five elements. Prayer flags are considered sacred and hung high off the ground so that the passing breeze can carry their blessings and bring benefit to beings.

Prayer Wheel
Tib. མ་ནི་འཁོར་ལོ་ ma-ni khor-lo, is an ornate cylinder filled with mantra designed to rotate clockwise. The Buddha taught that the rotation of mantra in a prayer wheel has the same benefit as recitation. Some prayer wheels fill entire rooms, however, most often they are small enough to fit on a table or mounted on top of a handle to be spun by hand. Prayer wheels are widely used by practitioners in Tibet and India.

Protectors (Dharmapalas)
Skt. dharmapāla; Tib. ཆོས་སྐྱོང་ cho-kyong, are a class of beings that take the form of fierce worldly gods that vow to protect the Dharma, the teachings, and practitioners. They are sometimes supermundane emanations of buddhas or bodhisattvas, or mundane spirits and demons who have been subjugated and bound under oath by great practitioners such as Guru Padmasambhava. Among the best known are Ekajati, Mahakala, Dza Rahula and Damchen Dorje Lekpa.

Puja Table
A small table separate from the shrine on which a practitioner places their practice texts and individual ritual implements. The practitioner can then sit at this table to do meditation practice.

Serkyem
Tib. གསེར་སྐྱེམས་ ser-kyem, is a two tiered offering vessel used to make offerings to the Dharma Protectors. The name translates as ‘golden drink’ which refers to the tea, beer, or wine used to fill the cup/chalice. The lower plate is often filled with cookies and other foods. When assembled, the cup/chalice stands atop the plate and the cookies and drink are then offered together.

Singing Bowl
The singing bowl is a type of standing bell that sits with its bottom surface on a pillow or table. When struck with a mallet singing bowls make a rich harmonic sound. Singing bowls are used in Buddhist shrines during prayer and meditation (for example, to signal the beginning and end to a meditation session).

Stupa
Skt. stūpa; Tib. མཆོད་རྟེན་ cho-ten, is a reliquary monument or statue that represents the mind of enlightenment. They vary in size from giant monuments to small pendants and are filled with holy relics.

T'hangka
Tib. ཐང་ཀ་ t'hang-ka, is an iconographic painting on canvas of buddhas, bodhisattvas, mandalas, and great practitioners. The images on a t'hangka are painted according to classical proportions and the gestures, implements, and colors of the painted subject have symbolic spiritual value related directly to visualization practice. The canvas is usually mounted onto a brocade cloth frame and hung on a wall. Any image of a buddha or holy being is considered sacred, thus t’hangka should be displayed in a dignified place. T’hangkas can be rolled up like a scroll for transportation.

Tantra
Skt. tantra; Tib. རྒྱུད་ gyü, are the root texts of the Vajrayana teachings, the type of Buddhism prevalent in Tibet.

Tara
Skt. tārā; Tib. སྒྲོལ་མ, drol-ma, is a buddha in a female form. As Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche teaches in his Introduction to the Red Tara Sadhana, "Tara is the flawless expression of the inseparability of emptiness, awareness and compassion. Just as you use a mirror to see your face, Tara meditation is a means of seeing the true face of your mind, devoid of any trace of delusion." Tara has made a particular commitment to liberate beings from the eight great fears and offer swift liberation from suffering.

Tingshak
Tib. ཏིང་ཤག་ ting-shag, are small metal cymbals that play a high pitched tone. They are used principally in sur practice (burnt offering) or as a symbolic sound offering on a shrine.

Torma
Tib. གཏོར་མ་ tor-ma, is a ritual sculpture that can symbolize a deity, mandala, food offering, or ritual activity. A ceremonial torma is hand-formed out of oats or roasted barley flour, painted with dyes, and decorated a butter wax mixed called ‘kargyen’. Permanent tormas are made from a variety of materials including wax, clay, plaster, and metal. The torma shapes are specific to their symbolic purpose and tradition and are displayed on shrines or offered accordingly. A torma that represents a deity and mandala, for example, will have a prominent place on a shrine, whereas a torma that represents a food offering would be placed lower.

Tsa-tsa
Tib. ཚ་ཚ་ tsa-tsa, is a relief iconographic image made from an impression mold that depicts the form of a buddha or enlightened mind. These relief images are sacred and can be placed on altars or other dignified places as support for mediation practice. They are commonly made of clay, plaster, stone, resin etc.

Vajra
Skt. vajra; Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་ dor-je, is an important ritual implement in Vajrayana Buddhism. It is symbolic of compassion and skillful means (masculine aspect) as well as the adamantine and indestructible quality of enlightened mind. The vajra is always accompanied by the bell, which is symbolic of the wisdom of emptiness (feminine aspect). The number of spokes, commonly five or nine, of the vajra and bell set should be identical in style and number.

Vajrayana
Skt. vajrayāna; Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་ཐེག་པ་, dor-je tek-pa, or 'Vajra Vehicle' is one of the three main vehicles of Buddhism and is built upon the the foundation of the other two vehicles: the Sutrayana and Mahayana. The Vajrayana uses the special methods of the Tantras to swiftly pursue the path of enlightenment for the benefit of all beings. It originated in India and spread to Tibet where it has flourish for many centuries. The Vajrayana, sometimes known in Western culture as Tibetan Buddhism or Tantric Buddhism, is now practiced around the globe.

Wrathful Activity
Tib. དྲག་པོའི་ལས་ drag-poi-lay, is one of the 'Four Activities.' Wrathful activity benefits beings by compassionately taming their strong negative impulses and the effects of strong negative karmas. Buddhas that engage in this activity are associated with dark colors such as black, dark blue, or dark green. Examples of this are Vajrakilaya and T'hroma.

Zen
Tib. གཟན་ zen, is a shawl worn by buddhist monastics and lay practitioners around the upper torso and over the left shoulder. Zens have specific colors, tailorings, and fabrics that vary depending on the tradition and type of practitioner. Common colors are: solid white, solid maroon, maroon with white stripes, and yellow/orange patchwork.

Glossary of Buddhas

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There are currently 18 names in this directory
Akshobhya
Skt. akṣobhya; Tib. མི་བསྐྱོད་པ་, Mi-kyod-pa. The Buddha Akshobhya is the lord of the Vajra family. He established the enlightened intention that all sentient beings could purify any degree of non virtue, and even the extreme non virtue of hatred, violence, and killing can be cleansed through relying on him as the focus of meditation. Akshobhya explicitly promised that the merit generated by reciting one-hundred-thousand of his long dhayani mantra and creating an image of him could be dedicated to another person, even someone long deceased, and they would be assured of release from lower states of existence and rebirth in spiritually fortunate circumstances. Akshobhya is a deep blue color and sits with his left hand in an earth-touching mudra and his right hand holds a vajra in the palm.

Amitabha
Skt. Amitābha; Tib. འོད་དཔག་མེད་ Od Pag-med, 'Buddha of Boundless Light' belongs to the Lotus Buddha Family (one of the Five Buddha Families). The Amitabhavyuha Sutra says that many aeons ago, as the monk Dharmakara, he generated bodhichitta in the presence of the Buddha Lokeshvara. At that time, he made fifty-one vows to lead all beings to his pure realm of Sukhavati (Tib. བདེ་བ་ཅན་, Dewachen). Amitabha is commonly associated with the practice of 'p'howa', the transference of consciousness at the time of death. P'howa into Amitabha's pure land of Dewachen is relatively easy to accomplish; due to Amitabha's blessings even ordinary people can accomplish it.

Amitayus
Skt. Amitāyus, Tib. ཚེ་དཔག་མེད་ Tse Pag-med, 'The Buddha of Boundless Life' is a sambhogakaya aspect of Buddha Amitabha. He is associated with the quality of longevity and is depicted in a red color, sitting, and holding in his hands a longevity vase containing the nectar of immortality.

Chenrezig
Skt. Avalokiteśvara; Tib. སྤྱན་རས་གཟིགས་ Chenrezig, is called the bodhisattva of great compassion. He is usually depicted as white in color, seated holding a lotus, a pearl mala, and a wish-fulfilling jewel at his heart. In his form as Avalokiteshvara he is standing with one-thousand arms. Chenrezig is of special importance to Tibetans, so much so that he is sometimes described as the patron deity of Tibet. Among his emanations are the lineages of Dalai Lamas and Karmapas.

Dzambhala
Skt. jambhala; Tib. ཛམ་བྷ་ལ་ Dzambhala, is a buddha associated with the qualities of wealth and prosperity. He is usually depicted as yellow in color with a full figure and holding in his left hand a mongoose that spits jewels.

Garuda
Skt. garuḍa; Tib. ཁྱུང་, khyung, is a mythical bird-like creature that has the upper torso of a human and holds a naga serpent in its mouth. The gaurda symbolizes various elements of the Buddhist path: it is said that the gaurda flies higher than anyother bird and thus symbolizes the highest view; and the garuda can be a symbol of protection and the freedom from hopes and fears as it overwhelms the causes of obstacles and disease. The garuda appears as an enlightened element in Vajrayana deity practices like Hayagriva and Vajrakilaya.

Green Tara
Skt. Śyāmatārā; Tib. སྒྲོལ་ལྗང་ Drol Jang, is known as the mother of all bodhisattvas because she loves all sentient beings like a mother. She is the embodiment of the quality of enlightened activity and offers swift protection from fear and delusions.

Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava)
Skt. Padmasambhava or Skt. Padmākara, is known by the name Tib. གུ་རུ་རིན་པོ་ཆེ་ Guru Rinpoche meaning 'Precious Guru.' or Tib. པདྨ་འབྱུང་གནས་ Padmajungnay, meaning 'Lotus Born,' referring to his birth from a lotus in the land of Oddiyana. He is the founder of Tantric Buddhism (Vajrayana Buddhism) in Tibet and was invited to Tibet from India by the 37th king of Tibet, King Trisong Detsen, in the late 8th-century. He is considered the second Buddha of our time and if often depicted in three layers of robes with a lotus hat crown, holding a katvanga, a vajra, and skullcup filled with divine nectar. Guru Rinpoche has many forms and is said to have taken eight forms or manifestations representing different aspects of his activity to benefit beings.

Kurukulle (Padma Dakini)
Skt. kurukullā; Tib. རིག་བྱེད་མ་ Rigjed-ma, is a female buddha of the Lotus Family and a form of Tara associated with the activity of magnetizing and enchantment. She is depicted as red in color, in dancing posture and holding a flowery bow and arrow. Her name in Sanskrit is Kurukulla and in Tibetan she is known by Kurukulle or Padma Dakini.

Longchenpa
Tib. ཀློང་ཆེན་པ་, also known as Longchen Rabjam (Tib. ཀློང་ཆེན་རབ་འབྱམས་), ‘Infinite, Vast Expanse of Space’, or Drimé Özer (1308-1364), was one of the most brilliant teachers of the Nyingma lineage. He systematized the Nyingma teachings in his ‘Seven Treasures’ and wrote extensively on Dzogchen. He transmitted the Longchen Nyingtik cycle of teachings and practice to Jikmé Lingpa, and it has since become one of the most widely practised of traditions.

Manjushri
Skt. Mañjuśrī; Tib. འཇམ་དཔལ་དབྱངས་ Jampal-yang, is the embodiment of the knowledge and wisdom of all the buddhas. He is orange in color and depicted brandishing a flaming sword of transcendent wisdom in his right hand. The scripture on the lotus held in his left hand is the renown 'Prajnaparamita' text, representing the attainment of ultimate realization which blossoms from wisdom. Manjushri has the qualities of increasing intelligence, acuity, and wisdom.

Medicine Buddha
Skt. Bhaiṣajyagurubuddha; Tib. སངས་རྒྱས་སྨན་བླ་ Sangyay Menla, is also known as the Master of Medicine and King of Lapis Lazuli Light. The Medicine Buddha provides healing from illness, both physical and mental. He is peaceful, deep blue and hold a bowl full of medicine and a medicinal myrobalan flower.

Red Tara
Tib. སྒྲོལ་མ་དམར་མོ་ Drolma Marmo, belongs to the padma (lotus) family of deities who are associated with enlightened speech and the color red. Tara is ruby red, seated wearing jeweled ornaments, holding a longevity vase and a lotus on which rests a bow and arrow made of flowers. Red Tara has the magnetizing qualities to swiftly bring beings to the state of enlightenment. Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche practiced and propagated the Red Tara practice revealed by Apong Terton (20th Century). This Apong Terton Red Tara practice is upheld by many sanghas in the West.

Shakyamuni Buddha
Skt. Śākyamuni; Tib. སངས་རྒྱས་ཤཱཀྱ་ཐུབ་པ་ Sangyay Shakya-t'hupa, refers to the Indian prince Gautama Siddhartha, who reached enlightenment (and thus became a buddha) in the sixth century B.C. The historical Shakyamuni Buddha is the founder and origin of Buddhism; as a buddha he is often depicted as golden in color wearing monk's robes.

T'hroma Nagmo
Tib. ཁྲོ་མ་ནག་མོ་ T'hroma Nagmo, is a wrathful black dakini who has the quality of swiftly cutting through ego clinging; the root of all suffering. She is standing in dancing posture holding a curved-knife and a skullcup. According to Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche, "The T'hroma Nagmo based practice of Chod removes obstacles, both for our short-term happiness and those hindering our ultimate enlightenment. It carries extraordinary healing power and through its practice we can accumulate merit and wisdom in a vast and rapid way. Merely making a connection to T'hroma Nagmo practice brings great benefit and blessings." The T'hroma Nagmo from the Dudjom Tersar tradition contains a complete path to enlightenment and brings especially strong blessings.

Vajrakilaya
Skt. Vajrakīlaya; Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་ཕུར་པ་ Dorje Phurba, or Skt. Vajrakumāra; Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་གཞོན་ནུ་, Dorje Shön-nu. Heruka Vajrakilaya is the yidam deity who embodies the enlightened activity compassionate wrath. Vajrakilaya is powerful for removing obstacles, destroying the forces of negative tendencies, and purifying spiritual faults. The oldest tradition of Vajrakilaya is the Kön Vajrakilaya, which is an unbroken lineage of the Vajrakilaya practice since Guru Rinpoche introduced it in Tibet. More recently great tertons such as Dudjom Rinpoche (Dudjom Jikdral Yeshe Dorje) have revealed Vajrakilaya practices (’Pudri Rekpung: The Razor that Destroys at the Touch') that are practiced widely.

Vajrasattva
Skt. Vajrasattva; Tib. རྡོ་རྗེ་སེམས་དཔའ་ Dorje Sempa, he embodies the Hundred Peaceful and Wrathful Deities, and the Five Buddha Families. The practice of Vajrasattva and the recitation of his mantra are effective for the purification of negative actions. As is says in the Tantra of Immaculate Confession, "The Hundred Syllable Mantra is the quintessence of the mind of all the Sugatas. Its purifies all violations, all breaches, all conceptual obscurations." Also, the vow made by Vajrasattva as bodhisattva states, "May all sentient beings, by merely hearing, remembering, or uttering my name in prayer, be purified of their karmic negativity, and be liberated from the depths of cyclic existence."

White Tara
Skt. Sitatārā; Tib. སྒྲོལ་དཀར་ Drol-kar, White Tara brings serenity and long-life, and counteracts illness. She embodies enlightened compassion and is said to be as white and radiant as the moon. She has two arms seated on a white lotus and with eyes on her hands and feet, as well as a third eye on her forehead (thus she is "Seven eyed"). Also known as The Wish-fulfilling Wheel, or Cintachakra, she along with Green Tara is the most popular representation of Tara in Tibet.