What should one think of while offering?
When one offers sang, the person would have to do a lot of mental visualisations. For instance, when one starts sang, one would often chant mantras, the most common being oṃ aḥ huṃ.
With oṃ the person can visualise everything to be a pure empty space, with aḥ one can visualise in that pure state of emptiness all the fantastic offerings that rises in the form of smoke. With huṃ, the practitioner must think that the offering has been taken to all the Buddha and bodhisattvas.
In sang ritual, a practitioner should take refuge in the Buddha, dharma and sangha, generate an altruistic intention and visualise sang smoke from the state of emptiness. He or she should visualise the huge clouds of smoke as a mass of myriad offering sent in all directions.
Among the recipients, there are four; the precious enlightened beings, the protectors (deities and spirits), the sentient beings of six realms who are objects of one’s compassion and lastly the sentient beings to whom we owe karmic debt. The offering of sang is made to these recipients by visualizing the offerings as prima facie smoke but marvellous items of enjoyment in reality. Sang, is thus a practice of giving and also a process of purifying negativities such as stinginess, mental defilements and karmic debt.
Karma Phuntsho is the Director of Shejun Agency for Bhutan’s Cultural Documentation and Research, founder of the Loden Foundation and the author of The History of Bhutan. The piece was initially published in Bhutan’s national newspaper Kuensel in a series called Why We Do What We Do.