Om Vajrapani Hayagriva Garuda Hum Phat Official

Take refuge: "I go for refuge to the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha until I attain enlightenment. Through the merit of practicing generosity and the other perfections, may I attain enlightenment for the benefit of all beings."

The combined wrathful expressions are intended to forcefully clear away the "sloth of delusion" and inner negativities that prevent one from reaching Enlightenment. 3. Practice and Visualisation om vajrapani hayagriva garuda hum phat

To understand the mantra, one must first understand its components. Unlike a peaceful mantra that invokes a single aspect of enlightenment, this formula invokes (wrathful deities) simultaneously. Let’s break down the Sanskrit and Tibetan syllables. Take refuge: "I go for refuge to the

In Tibetan iconography, this practice often visualizes a single central deity containing the attributes of all three, or three distinct wrathful forms standing together. Each addresses a specific layer of human suffering and spiritual vulnerability. 1. Vajrapani (The Power) Practice and Visualisation To understand the mantra, one

: The seed syllable that seals the qualities of the deities inside the practitioner's heart center.

(The Solar Bird)

This mantra combines three powerful deities from Tibetan Buddhism: (power/wrathful energy), Hayagriva (fierce compassion / horse-headed), and Garuda (wisdom overcoming serpents/obstacles). The seed syllables hum (stabilization) and phat (cutting through ignorance) amplify its force.