Skip to product information
1 of 3

Olive Jade Kriya Mala

Olive Jade Kriya Mala

Regular price $38.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $38.00 USD
Sale Sold out

108 beads for japa and Kriya practice — rudraksha, semi-precious stone, or glass, strung by hand.

Quantity

⭐ 264 Reviews | Ethically Sourced | Free Shipping $75+ | Serving Seekers Since 2009

The Olive Jade Kriya Mala celebrates colors of the earth. This 36 count small mala is ideal for counting Kriyas at your personal sacred space at home or to take with you to a place of group Sadhana. 

This natural stone, hand strung mala is made of 36 (8 mm) olive jade beads, divided into sections of 12 , separated with tiny brown beads for  ease of counting. It is finished off with a larger Mahogany Obsidian guru bead. 

Olive Jade - is a natural stone that has been long used in the healing arts as a symbol of serenity, harmony, balance and therefore used in prayer beads to help during meditation. 

This mala is handcrafted and designed by us at Supreme Swan in Southern California.

Benefits

  • 108 beads — the traditional count for japa and Kriya practice
  • Unique 12-count Mala available to practice Kriya Sadhana
  • The texture and weight of the beads anchors attention during mantra repetition
  • Each bead is a moment of return — away from distraction, back to the practice
  • Can be worn throughout the day or kept at the meditation seat

Materials

  • Varies by mala: rudraksha, semi-precious stones, glass, sandalwood
  • All malas include a guru bead and an image of a Guru or Deity — a reminder
  • No synthetic materials in beads or stringing

Traditional Context

The mala is one of the oldest tools in the yogic tradition. In Kriya Yoga it has a specific function: counting repetitions of mantra or pranayama cycles. The number 108 appears throughout Sanskrit texts as a number of completion. For the serious practitioner, the mala is less a piece of jewelry and more a working instrument — it belongs at the meditation seat.

FAQ

What is the difference between the 108-bead and 12-bead mala?
The 108-bead mala is used for full japa rounds — one mantra per bead, 108 repetitions per round. The 12-bead mala is specific to Kriya Sadhana practice and is used for counting Kriya cycles.

Which mala material is traditional for Kriya practice?
Rudraksha is the most traditional material in the yogic lineage. However any natural material — stone, sandalwood, glass — is appropriate. What matters is consistent use with the same mala over time.

How do I use the guru bead?
The guru bead marks the beginning and end of a full round. When you reach it, do not cross over it — reverse direction and begin the next round. It is a moment of pause and remembrance.

Can I wear my mala?
Yes. Many practitioners wear their mala throughout the day as a reminder of practice. Some prefer to keep one mala exclusively for sitting practice.

Shipping & Returns

Free shipping on orders over $75. Ships worldwide. 30-day return policy for unused items in original packaging.

View full details

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
100%
(1)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
J
Johnny
Beautiful Devotional Piece

Bought this as a gift for a friend who just received his Kriya initiation. Durable. Mine seemed lighter in color which was fine. Really happy with it. These 36 beaded malas are hard to come by. To find ones made with intention by practicing kriyabans sealed the deal for me. Perfect