La Gukni: A Ritual to Gather Life Force
The ritual called la gukni (བླ་འགུག་ནི) refers to retrieving the personal energy collectively called la, which is believed to be vulnerable to theft by one of the eight classes of spirits. When one’s la is taken, it can cause severe illness. In the la gukni or ‘summoning the la’, the priest conducting the ritual summons the spirits to return the person’s la. Those who speak the Tshangla dialect call the ritual yong ralé (ཡོང་ར་ལེ).
It is believed that for every stone or tree, there is a spirit that owns it. When the owning spirit is not properly appeased, they get annoyed and cause harm to human beings. Further, it is believed that if the places where local spirits reside are despoiled or damaged without making necessary remedial prayers to the territorial deities, the encroacher will fall sick or lose his/her vitality. Such sickness is considered to be caused by evil spirits who steal the la that constitutes a person’s vitality and psychological strength. The remedial ritual of la gukni is conducted to appease the spirit through offerings and recover the la.
During the 8th century, King Sindhu Raja (སིནྡྷུ་རཱ་ཛ) of Bumthang fell ill, and his retinue invited Guru Rinpoché to come cure him. Guru found out that the King’s illness was caused by the local deity Shelging Karpo (ཤེལ་གྱིང་དཀར་པོ), who led all eight classes of demons, demi-gods and spirits in the valley. Shelging Karpo appeared before Guru Rinpoché, saying:
Oh! Great Tantric master!
As the chief of life-owning spirits, I am known as Shelging Karpo (ཤེལ་གྱིང་དཀར་པོ);
As the chief of malignant spirits, I am known as Gangwa Zangpo (གངས་བ་བཟང་པོ);
As the chief of water spirit, I am known as Mu-Ta-Zurchen (མ་ཏ་ཟུར་ཆེན);
As the chief of mountain spirits, I am known as Kebu-Lungtsen (སྐྱེ་བུ་ལུང་བཙན);
As the chief of za, I am known as Za-Chog-Gyalpo-Rahula (གཟའ་མཆོག་རྒྱལ་པོ་ར་ཧུ་ལ);
As the chief of demons, I am Zoraraké, the owner of death;
As the chief of lu (ཀླུ), I am the big serpent with nine heads;
As the chief of mamo (སྨན་མོ), I am Damsi Mamo (དམ་སྲི་སྨན་མོ);
The demi-gods visible and invisible are all my subjects. There is no tsen superior to me.
This is the lasok essence of Sindhu Raja; this I offer to you;
This was in return of his evil deeds earlier and from now on he should not commit such evil deeds.
Thus, he offered the king’s la to Guru Rinpoché and an the oath to be a protector of Dharma. Then, Guru Rinpoché and Machik Bumden Tsomo went to the Iron Castle (ལྕགས་མཁར་གཟིམ་ཅུང). There, from a metal casket, wrapped in a purse made of rat skin, they took out the sok (life force) and put it through the King’s nose, while the la, resembling a spider (བབ་ཤནམ) dissolved into rays and submerged into his crown. The king then wore an amulet to protect his life and fully recovered from his illness.
During the ritual of la gukni, varieties of twig plants are gathered from a specific direction indicated by the astrologer. Based on the instructions, s/he shakes the twigs over the patient’s head while s/he whistles certain tunes. The spider which falls on the patient’s head is identified as the lost la. If it is a black spider, it is considered bad for the patient and the patient will take time to recover. But if it is the white spider falling from the twigs, the lost soul is considered to be recovered. La (བླ), tsé (ཚེ) or life, sok (སྲོག), wangthang (དབང་ཐང་) or esteem and lungta (རླུང་རྟ་) are intangible cultural concepts known throughout Bhutan and the Himalayas.
Sonam Chophel is a researcher at Shejun Agency for Bhutan’s Cultural Documentation and Research.