Agel Enterprises - Epay agel global


What are you dreams?
Where do you want to be in life?
Would you like to get start freedom lifestyle & good wellness?
Part time or Full time...!
Can make more income our dream!

Answer these questions.
Then do what it takes to get there.



Photobucket

Magic and History Books

NamManPrai  




"NamManPrai" is the best black magic in spellbind type that under dark lines so; I think this amulet is the most horrific. Let see this story, so scared…….. 




This oil is helping you to control all the success which oil, especially sexual

What is NamManPrai?

NamManPrai is spirit oil that use candles burn around chin of the female, who died while pregnant.
Who can take oil from female died while pregnant that they must be high level magic and very strong power because they will be faced with the dreadful and terrible or may be faced with Spirit Ghost power, so they might become a maniac or simply to the death if no high magic. Waw…. This oil same evil a great mystery of dark magic.

Who hold this oil use with someone, they will love who owns NamManPrai oil like crazy.
So sad if you are lucky to selection because very difficult to get out of this black magic or not at all.


  
History
NamManPrai was popular history but we don’t know yet that it’s just believed or really story while scientist haven’t proofed truth information yet that we was talking for a long time about this amulet. Long time ago this oil offered for men who desire some women but her don’t want together with him, so they covered to have evil mind and don’t think bad effective if they done. 
What would they do with the oil??
The main materials
- Phong Phut Nang Prai is special powder.    
   (Phong is powder, Phut is Demon and Nang Prai is a kind of Thai spirit)
- Bone of Phee Prai Tai Tong Glom (who died while pregnant)
- Oil from coconut (which used to wash one's face who died of a violent death)
- Violent death bodies
- Soil from 7 cemeteries
To activate:
Dip oil on your lover’s body or someone who you want to do.
NamManPrai is unbelievable dark magic.





AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Email this post


Nang Kwak  

This amulet is supposed to bring wealth to the household and is particularly popular with shopkeepers.


Mae Nang Kwak (Thai: แม่นางกวัก) or Nang Kwak is a spirit or household divinity of Thai folklore. She brings prosperity.

Iconography
Mae Nang Kwak is represented as a beautiful woman wearing a red dress (less frequently in some other colors) in the Thai traditional style. She also wears a golden crown on her head and is in the sitting or kneeling position. Her right hand is raised in the Thai way of beckoning a customer, with the palm of the hand pointing downwards. Her left hand is resting on her side or holds a bag full of gold on her lap.



The figure of Mae Nang Kwak evolved from Mae Po Sop แม่โพสพ), the Siamese rice goddess, in recent times. The only difference is that she is not wearing the harvested rice sheaf on her right shoulder. These goddesses in turn have their origin in the Hindu goddess Sri Lakshmi.
The position of her hand is quite likely borrowed from the Japanese Maneki Neko beckoning cat.



Symbolism
Mae Nang Kwak is a benevolent spirit. She is deemed to bring luck, especially in the form of money, to the household.
Thai people like to have a figurine or poster of this goddess in their home or shop, where it is often placed by the shrine. Some people also wear amulets with her figure around the neck.



Nang Kwak-Background Information
The spirit is dressed in traditional Thai dress. In her left hand is a money bag and her right hand is beckoning Thai style-plam down. She is either beckonline customers to come into the store or asking for wealth to come her way.

It has been said that this goddess is one Thailand’s most intriguing cross-cultural and cross-species religions luck symbols that exists.

It is thought that Nang Kwak originally evolved from the Hindu Goddess Parvathi, the daugher of the mountains, who it was said was the first to grow rice.

She first appeared in Thailand as a rice and prosperity goddess with a sheaf of rice over her shoulder. The money bag in her lap and the beckoning hand were added at later dates, design elements almost certainly borrowed from the familiar Japanese Maneki Neko beckoning cat, agood luck talisman for merchants. In some examples she is ever featured with feline characteristics, notably a tail.



Add to this to the fact that Nang Kwank is offer represented in the form of a phallus or Thai Palad Khik with her body conforming to the shaft of the male organ and wearing a hat in the shape of the glans- an iconographic reference to the incorporation of very Hindu Shaivism into Thai Buddhism.

Wow..I would like to hold this amulet. And you?

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Email this post


 
Halloween Momok Magic © Template Design by Kent Lim