RAVE REVIEWSHello Enerchi: I was probably one of the first of your customers to buy a Himalayan Salt Crystal Lamp when you started carrying them over 4 years ago. You explained in knowledgeable ways that the salt lamp performs a fuction that reduces the static tension in my home that makes it feel more peaceful. I like the lamps so much that I now have 3 of them throughout my house. I have also given about a dozen over the last couple of years as gifts. Everybody that has one from me just loves theirs too. Thank you and keep the good energy flowing.
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Product Catalog > Home Decor > Gongs
Gongs Inspired by the Torii of Itsukushima Shrine, our Torii Garden Gong has sweeping lines and understated elegance.
One of Japan's most popular tourist destinations, the Torii of Itsukushima Shrine is at once graceful and sturdy. Facing the water, the gate welcomes the spirits of the departed as they come in across Japan's Inland Sea. At low tide, visitors can reach the gates on foot. At high tide, however, the bright red gate appears to float in the water.
In Buddhism, the gong is sounded at the start and end of each day. In Chinese temples, gongs are struck 108 times because it's believed that sentient beings have 108 types of worries. The teaching is this, upon hearing the gong, worries will cease, wisdom will grow?.
Nothing has the ability to transport us to another time and place quite like the brilliant resonance of a gong. For over a thousand years, gongs of various types have played an important role in both the religious and secular music of many Asian cultures. Gongs were sounded to chase away evil spirits, warn of invading armies, heal the sick and invoke the spirits of the dead. To be touched by a gong was said to bring happiness and strength.
Handcrafted using traditional methods, gongs bring the ancient wonders of the Far East home.
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