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Portal Glastonbury

Ref.PD1039

Ref.PD1039

Regular price £150.00 GBP
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Ref.PD1039 - Gold plated on silver pendant with Tantric Star geometry, abalone carved wings, tourmaline, and amethyst gemstones; depicts both a chalice as well as an abstract scarab.

Tantric Star

Activation: Initiation, Inspiration

The Tantric Star is formed by interlocking ascending and descending tetrahedrons (see below). Also known as the Mer Ka Ba, the Tantric Star functions as a 3-dimensional mandala, connecting us to our centre point, a stargate into the matrix of manifest reality. It describes the energy pattern created by the electromagnetic male and female potencies of creation as they come together to conceive atoms, Humans, the Universe - the seminal form that Consciousness takes as it initiates the polarisation of the Monad into the sacred enclosure of the Trinity, holding the frequency of the 3rd dimension fully manifest in form.

This form protects against unbalanced magnetic emanations, e.g., mobile and cordless phones. 

The scarab beetle spiritual significance and symbolic meaning details as follows:

    Transformation and Rebirth: The scarab beetle is universally recognized for symbolizing transformation. Its life cycle, where it emerges from the dung ball it buries, has been interpreted as a metaphor for rebirth, personal growth, and the ability to overcome adversity. This transformation from one state to another has made it a symbol of renewal and the cyclical nature of life.
    Protection: In many cultures, the scarab has been used as a protective symbol. Its hard shell represents a shield against negative energies or forces. Amulets shaped like scarabs were worn or carried in ancient times for protection against harm, both physical and spiritual.
    Resilience and Perseverance: The act of the scarab beetle rolling dung balls, which can be many times its own size, symbolizes strength, resilience, and the capacity to keep moving forward despite obstacles. This has been adopted as a life lesson about perseverance and the importance of hard work.
    Cycle of Life and Death: The scarab's association with the cycle of life, death, and rebirth is evident in its natural behavior. It encapsulates the idea that from death or destruction (the dung) comes new life, symbolizing the continuity of life's journey, not its end.
    Connection to Nature: On a broader spiritual level, the scarab represents a connection with the natural world, emphasizing the importance of understanding and respecting life's cycles. It serves as a reminder of the interconnectedness of all living things and the natural processes that sustain life.
    Symbol of Time: The scarab also embodies the concept of time as cyclical rather than linear, with each day's journey of the beetle akin to the sun's journey across the sky - a daily renewal and a reminder of life's continuous nature.
    Creativity and Manifestation: The beetle's ability to create something valuable (new life) from something mundane or even repulsive (dung) can be seen as a symbol of creativity and the potential to manifest positive outcomes from challenging situations.

In contemporary spiritual practices, the scarab continues to be a symbol of these themes. People might meditate on or use scarab imagery to invoke these qualities in their lives, focusing on personal transformation, protection, resilience, and the acceptance of life's natural cycles.

The chalice carries a rich, layered mystic significance that transcends specific traditions, emerging as a universal symbol woven into human consciousness through its form, function, and metaphorical resonance. Its esoteric meaning can be explored through its inherent qualities and the archetypes it evokes, without tethering it to any single doctrine.

At its core, the chalice is a vessel—an open, receptive container. This shape alone holds profound implications. It suggests receptivity, a willingness to hold or receive something intangible or vital, whether liquid, energy, or essence. The act of containment implies both vulnerability and power: it’s passive in its openness yet active in its capacity to preserve what’s poured into it. Mystically, this mirrors the human condition—a being capable of receiving insight, emotion, or unseen forces, transforming the ordinary into something sacred through the act of holding it.

The chalice’s structure amplifies this. Its wide mouth narrows to a stem and base, creating a flow from expansiveness to stability. This form evokes a bridge between realms—the broad rim reaching upward, open to the ethereal, while the grounded base roots it in the material. Esoterically, it’s a conduit, channeling what’s above into what’s below, or vice versa, embodying a union of opposites. The curve of its bowl suggests femininity, intuition, and the womb—a cradling space—while the upright stem hints at direction or purpose, a masculine counterpoint. Together, they weave a symbol of wholeness, where duality resolves into harmony.

Liquid, often associated with the chalice, deepens its mysticism. Water, wine, or blood—whatever it holds—represents life, transformation, or the flow of spirit. The chalice doesn’t create this essence but elevates it, making the act of drinking or offering a ritual of communion with something greater. This transformative potential is key: what’s mundane (a sip) becomes profound (a connection) through the vessel’s mediation. The chalice thus signifies a threshold, a point where the physical and metaphysical intersect, where intention turns substance into meaning.

Its use in ritual underscores this. Across cultures, chalices appear in ceremonies—raised in offering, shared in unity, or gazed into for vision. The act of lifting it suggests aspiration, a reaching toward the infinite, while drinking from it internalizes that pursuit. Mystically, it’s a tool for transcendence, a tangible object that facilitates an inner shift. Gazing into its depths, as in scrying, turns it into a mirror of the unseen, reflecting truths beyond the surface—a portal to intuition or the subconscious.

The chalice also carries an aura of mystery through its emptiness. When unfilled, it’s potential unrealized, a void awaiting purpose. This emptiness is potent—it invites projection, imagination, or the unknown, making the chalice a symbol of possibility. In esoteric terms, it’s the unmanifest, the space before creation, echoing the idea that all form arises from nothingness. Yet once filled, it becomes abundance, a cup overflowing with meaning, vitality, or revelation.

In a broader sense, the chalice resonates as a symbol of the quest. Its presence in myths—whether as a sought-after relic or a bearer of elixir—casts it as an object of yearning, something that promises fulfillment yet demands pursuit. This journeying aspect ties it to the mystic path: a seeker’s tool, embodying both the search and the discovery, the longing and the satiation.

The chalice stands as a timeless emblem of receptivity, transformation, and unity. Its mystic significance lies in its ability to hold contradictions—empty yet full, fragile yet enduring, earthly yet transcendent. It’s a silent invitation to look within, to pour out or take in, and to find meaning in the space between.

Size: 55mm/2.17in approx.

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