Yakshini (Sanskrit: याक्षिणि, also known as Yakshi and Yakkhini in Pali) are mythical beings of Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain mythology. Yakshini (Yakshi) is the female counterpart of the male Yaksha, and they are attendees of Kubera, the Hindu god of wealth who rules in the mythical Himalayan kingdom of Alaka. They are the guardians of the treasure hidden in the earth and resemble that of fairy. Yakshinis are often depicted as beautiful and voluptuous, with wide hips, narrow waists, broad shoulders, and exaggerated, spherical breasts. In Uddamareshvara Tantra, thirty-six Yakshinis are described, including their mantras and ritual prescriptions. A similar list of Yakshas and Yakshinis are given in the Tantraraja Tantra, where it says that these beings are givers of whatever is desired. Although Yakshinis are usually benevolent, there are also yakshinis with malevolent characteristics in Indian folklore.
The list of thirty six yakshinis given in the Uddamareshvara Tantra is as follows:
Lie alone in an empty bedroom
You were young so long ago
Lost the purple heart they gave you
Why did it mean so much before?
Crawled from the remains of war
Soon the world will care no more
They've never been through living hell
"Just an old man with a story to tell"
[Chorus]
NO ONE KNOWS
NO ONE CARES
NO ONE CARES ABOUT YOU NO MORE
Strung along on a soldier's pension
And you've survived so many friends
Fought for God and Country,
Only to be forgotten in the end
Crawled from the remains of war
Soon the world will care no more
They've never been through living hell
"Just an old man with a story to tell"
[Chorus]
And with each new generation
Another story ceases to be told
What about the new generations?
Will anybody know?
Someday you'll be forgotten
Just a chapter in the history books
And they'll see a thousand crucifixes