Composing…
Composing…
क्लीं
Deity
Kamadeva, Krishna
Element
Air
Reference
Mantra Mahodadhi
Attraction, love, fulfillment of desires
Krishna mantras; Kama-bija for attraction; in Lalita's Panchadashi
A bīja mantra (literally “seed-mantra”) is the most concentrated form of mantric power. The 21 primary bījas of the Hindu tantric tradition are not chosen by convention — they are derived from the matrix of Sanskrit phonemes (mātṛkā), each carrying a specific energetic vibration, an elemental association, and a presiding devatā or aspect of consciousness. klīṃ carries the energy of Kamadeva, Krishna and the air element.
In tantric practice, bījas function in three modes. As a complete mantra, they can be japa-ed alone — pure klīṃ, repeated for hundreds of rounds. As a seed, they head longer mantras (e.g., the Pañcadaśī of Lalitā opens with ka-e-ī-la-hrīṃ; the Saraswati mantra opens with aiṃ). As nyāsa-bījas, they are placed on body parts during preparation for major pūjās — saying the bīja while touching the corresponding part of the body consecrates the body as a seat of the deity.
The proper use of a bīja mantra is traditionally received from a guru along with the rules of pronunciation (uchāraṇa), the count (saṅkhyā), and the conditions for sustained practice (anuṣṭhāna). Casual experimentation with bījas — especially fierce ones (huṃ, phaṭ, krīṃ) — is discouraged in classical tantric texts because they carry significant force.
Sources: Mantra Mahodadhi · Mantra Yoga Saṃhitā · Tantrarāja Tantra. Awaiting scholar verification.