Lakshmi, Tara & Shiva
Lakshmi is the goddess of beauty, fortune, and wealth, representing both material and spiritual well-being and serving as the Shakti of Vishnu. Tara embodies the feminine deity and is revered in Tibet as the mother of all Buddhas, depicted with gestures of wish and protection. Shiva, one of the main deities of Hinduism, encompasses many contradictions and is worshipped as Mahayogi, Lord of the Universe, and Nataraja, the destroyer of ignorance.
Lakshmi
She is the goddess of earth, beauty, happiness and wealth. She is not only the goddess of material happiness, but also of spiritual well-being and abundance. She is the Shakti, the sustaining force of her consort Vishnu.
Tara
She embodies the female deity in herself. Her name means both "star" and "savior". In Tibet she is called "Dölma", which simply means mother. She is revered there as the mother of all Buddhas. Her right hand is turned down in the gesture of granting wishes, the left hand shows the gesture of granting protection.
The Green Tara is worshipped as a protector from all dangers. At all times, day or night, she is ready to protect and help.
Shiva
Shiva is one of the most important gods of Hinduism. Shiva agrees many opposites within himself: he is benevolent and inauspicious, meditative and ecstatic, a god of the universe and yet a god with a preference for certain earthly sites such as Mount Kailash and the city of Benares.
Shiva is worshipped in many guises, as a great yogi (Mahayogi) who practices asceticism or devotes himself to meditation, as the great Lord of the World or as the Lord of the Dance (Nataraja) who dances ignorance under his feet and destroys everything that is not based on truth and love. The current great purification period of our planet is symbolized by Shiva Nataraja.