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The Xuanling Repose Tablet is a sacred artifact from the thousand-year tradition of the Xuanling Lineage, created for Guardians to enshrine in remembrance of a departed animal companion. The names of the animal companion and Guardian are hand-written upon the tablet, allowing it to carry the Guardian’s deepest remembrance and wishes.
Within the Xuanling Lineage, the passing of life does not mark the end of a spiritual bond. The tablet is consecrated through a Dedicated Repose Ritual personally conducted by the 56th-generation Grandmaster. During the ritual, the tablet and its three Repose Petition documents are activated to bring peace and repose to the departed companion’s spirit.
Following the ritual, the tablet is enshrined upon the Xuanling dedicated altar for 30 days. After this period, the Guardian may choose to continue the enshrinement, or have the tablet dispatched home, where offerings and remembrance may continue.
Intended for Guardians who wish to offer a solemn ritual of repose for a departed companion and give their remembrance a peaceful place to rest.
Every Xuanling Spiritual Artifact is prepared through a dedicated ritual personally conducted by the 56th-generation Grandmaster, following traditional ceremonial practice and auspicious dates.
If required, provide details about you and your animal companion before adding the item to your cart. This allows the altar to be prepared specifically for your ritual.
The altar is arranged according to your information and chosen artifact. If included, your Prayer Petition (Biao Wen) is written and placed on the altar. The 56th-generation Grandmaster then performs the ritual using traditional incantations and rites. Your artifact is ritually blessed, and one copy of the Prayer Petition (if included) remains enshrined on the altar, where chanting continues for blessing and protection.
You will receive your blessed artifact, Prayer Petition (Biao Wen), and photo or video documentation (if included). The artifact may be worn or displayed, and the Prayer Petition may be framed or preserved in the provided envelope.
This is a cultural spiritual practice rooted in traditional Eastern wisdom. It is not a religion and requires no belief or worship of any deity. All rituals are conducted with respect, clarity, and transparency.
All beads are made from natural materials. The core bead incorporates sacred altar elements, so minor natural imperfections may appear. These do not affect the ritual. If you have strict expectations regarding appearance, please consider carefully before purchasing.
Charlie died last year. I didn't have a ceremony for it — there usually isn't one, for a dog. This gave me one. Knowing his name is written on the tablet and being tended at the Xuanling dedicated altar while it's there made the grief feel less unwitnessed. After the period ends, I'm bringing the tablet home.
I lost Cleo after 15 years and the grief was the quiet, constant kind — the kind that doesn't announce itself, just lives in daily routines. The ceremony gave it a ritual. The 90-day altar period at the Xuanling dedicated altar gave it a structure. The tablet is on my shelf now. Just her and me.
My Shepherd Hans died in autumn. A colleague told me about this and I was skeptical — I'm not a ceremonial person. But the weight of what I'd lost needed something with weight to match it. The altar period at the Xuanling dedicated altar felt serious in exactly the right way. I'm not skeptical anymore.
My cat was my companion for 12 years. After the ceremony, something in how I was carrying the grief began to change — not disappear, just become different. The tablet came home after the 90-day altar period. It's in my bedroom now. I light a candle near it on Sunday evenings sometimes.
Finn passed at 13. I didn't cry at the time — I think I genuinely went numb. The ceremony, which I did several weeks later, was where the grief actually arrived. I hadn't expected that. Knowing it's being tended at the Xuanling dedicated altar gave it somewhere to continue. I'm glad I did it properly.
Oliver passed in February and a friend told me about this. I wasn't sure I was ready — it felt large. I ordered it in March. His name is written on the tablet and it's being tended at the Xuanling dedicated altar now. The 90-day period is still ongoing. Knowing that something is actively being held for him, somewhere — that already helps.
The ceremony gave the grief a shape I didn't know it needed.
His name is written on the tablet. That's the part that mattered most.