Vajrayogini - Krodha Kali
(Tibetan: Troma Nagmo. Sanskrit: Krishna Krodhini. English: the Fierce Black One), a wrathful form of Vajravarahi.
Bhagavani Krodha Kali with a great radiance at the time of darkness, fierce and raging.
The main face is wrathful, the very pure relative truth, and the upper face of a pig is the pure ultimate truth, gazing upward; [both] having three round red eyes.
The right hand holds a curved knife upraised and the left a skullcup of blood [held] to the heart. In the bend of the left elbow, as the nature of method, appears a katvanga staff.
Wearing an elephant hide as an upper garment and a tiger skin as a lower garment; adorned with snakes and bones. Dark yellow hair bristles upward, the remainder falling loose.
With a crown of five dry human skulls, a necklace of fifty fresh.
The left leg is extended in a half dance posture pressing on the heart of a human corpse.
Appearing youthful and dwelling in the middle of a blazing mass of fire.?
(Terdag Lingpa Gyurme Dorje (1646-1714) and Min-ling Lochen Dharmashri 1654-1718).
Blue-black in colour, she has one central face and a small brown pig head on the crown looking to the right.
Wrathful in appearance she has three round glaring eyes, a gaping red mouth and yellow hair flowing upward like flames.
In the right hand held upraised is a curved knife.
In the left held to the heart is a blood filled skullcup; a katvanga staff rests against the shoulder.
Adorned with a tiara of five skulls, bone earrings, ornaments and a necklace of freshly severed heads, draped across the shoulders she wears a frightful human skin.
Standing on the left leg in a posture of dance atop a corpse, sun disc and lotus blossom, she is completely surrounded by the orange-red flames of pristine awareness.
At the lower left, presented as an offering, is a skullcup of nectar.
At the lower right is a skullcup of blood.
The original practice lineage belongs to the Zhije School of Phadampa Sanggye but has now been adopted by all the Sarma Schools of Tibetan Buddhism to a greater or lesser extent.
Troma Nagmo is also found in the Terma (Revealed Treasure) Tradition of the Nyingmapa School.
"From the pure, unborn, dharmadhatu palace; Fierce Vajra Black One, performing the benefit of beings; Entire treasure of all excellent and common attainments; Powerful Mistress, to you I bow." (Nyingma Liturgical verse).
Troma Nagmo with a retinue of Four Dakinis (Sanskrit: Krishna Krodhini. English: the Fierce Black One), a wrathful form of Vajravarahi.