Foxglove's Location on Planet Earth:
We are on the corner of railroad st, fern ave, and hemlock.
555 Hemlock St. Brookings, OR 97415
Shop Hours
Monday - Friday
10:00am - 5:00pm
Saturday
11:00am-5:00pm
Sunday
Closed
"Connecting to the wildness of nature has the ability to uplift, heal and sustain life."
Chelle Fraser
Prayer Malas, strung with Love by Sue Robson.
All Malas are hand made and may contain differences as each is as unique as you. Each Mala is strung with the intention that your spiritual practice is strengthened by its use.
Sue Robson, who lives in both Brookings, Oregon and Santa Rosa, California, created PrayerMalas.com in 2010. She is a Licensed Prayer Practitioner / Spiritual Counselor and enjoys making and selling her malas as well as writing, coaching, and being anywhere near the ocean.
“I love to help facilitate a place where we can learn to be all we are supposed to be and practice what allows us to feel closer to the Divine. This allows us:
“A mantra must connect you with the sacred… The use of mantra sets up one thought, one wave that repeats over and over again, dislodging your attachment to all other thoughts, until they are like birds gliding by… You pass the beads across your fingers, bead by bead, with each repetition of the mantra. If your mind wanders, the activity of the hand or the touch of the bead will remind you of the mantra. The rhythm becomes more compelling, the experience more total as your body works in harmony with the mind.” ~Ram Dass: Journey of Awakening: A Meditator’s Guidebook
A Japa mala or mala (Sanskrit: mala, meaning “garland” is a set of beads commonly used by Hindus and Buddhists, usually made from 108 beads. Malas are used for keeping count while reciting, chanting, or mentally repeating a mantra, an affirmation, or the name or names of a deity. This practice is known in Sanskrit as japa. The 109th bead on a mala is called the sumeru, bindu, stupa, or guru bead. Counting should always begin with a bead next to the sumeru. If more than 108 recitations are to be done, one changes directions when reaching the guru bead rather than crossing over it. There are numerous explanations why there are 108 beads, with the number 108 bearing special religious significance in the Hindu and Buddhist traditions.
Chelle Fraser
CAM & Herbalist
Foxglove's Location on Planet Earth:
We are on the corner of railroad st, fern ave, and hemlock.
555 Hemlock St. Brookings, OR 97415
Shop Hours
Monday - Friday
10:00am - 5:00pm
Saturday
11:00am-5:00pm
Sunday
Closed