@daarshik108: Most people fix problems after...
@daarshik108
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Jun 13, 2026
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1
Most people fix problems after they happen.
Ancient India had a system to stop them from happening at all.
It is called Muhurta.
ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MUHURATA AS REMEDIAL MEASURE - 1/N 🧵
DEFEAT BAD LUCK BEFORE IT ARRIVES.
Ancient India had a system to stop them from happening at all.
It is called Muhurta.
ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MUHURATA AS REMEDIAL MEASURE - 1/N 🧵
DEFEAT BAD LUCK BEFORE IT ARRIVES.
2
I have studied & worked on dozens of remedies in Vedic astrology. Gemstones, mantras, charity, fasting. All of them have their place.
But there is one remedy that comes before all of them, that is basic foundation of every other remedy, and almost everyone forgot this one remedial measure in the wave of modernity.
That remedy is Muhurta. Choosing the right moment to begin.
This thread is everything I found about why it works and how to use it.
Muhurta is a Sanskrit word. It simply means moment. But in the ancient Vedic framework, it carries a very specific definition.
Muhurta is the most auspicious time to begin any new activity. Not the most convenient time. Not the most emotionally ready time. The cosmically aligned time. And the difference between starting something at a random moment and starting it at a Muhurta is not superstition. It is science that India had figured out while most of the world was still in the stone age.
Rishis described this framework thousands of years ago. They divided the sky into 27 fixed constellations called Nakshatras, divided the Sun's circumference into 12 equal parts, giving us the 12 rashis or zodiac signs.
And demonstrated that when a planet moves through a particular constellation, it produces a specific set of energies. When it moves into another, the frequency changes entirely.
And let me tell you this was not philosophy. It was mathematics. Calculated through meditation and observation with a precision that modern science took telescopes and centuries to match.
But there is one remedy that comes before all of them, that is basic foundation of every other remedy, and almost everyone forgot this one remedial measure in the wave of modernity.
That remedy is Muhurta. Choosing the right moment to begin.
This thread is everything I found about why it works and how to use it.
Muhurta is a Sanskrit word. It simply means moment. But in the ancient Vedic framework, it carries a very specific definition.
Muhurta is the most auspicious time to begin any new activity. Not the most convenient time. Not the most emotionally ready time. The cosmically aligned time. And the difference between starting something at a random moment and starting it at a Muhurta is not superstition. It is science that India had figured out while most of the world was still in the stone age.
Rishis described this framework thousands of years ago. They divided the sky into 27 fixed constellations called Nakshatras, divided the Sun's circumference into 12 equal parts, giving us the 12 rashis or zodiac signs.
And demonstrated that when a planet moves through a particular constellation, it produces a specific set of energies. When it moves into another, the frequency changes entirely.
And let me tell you this was not philosophy. It was mathematics. Calculated through meditation and observation with a precision that modern science took telescopes and centuries to match.
3
Understanding Muhurta requires understanding the Panchang. Panch means five. Ang means limb.
Panchang is the five-limbed Hindu almanac, the daily cosmic map that ancient India used to navigate time itself.
Every single day, these five elements combine to create a unique energetic signature. That signature tells you whether a given moment supports a specific kind of action or works against it.
Choosing your starting point using the Panchang is not about fear. It is about alignment. Starting work at the right moment is like catching the right current in a river rather than swimming against it.
The five elements of the Panchang are Tithi, Vaar, Nakshatra, Yog, and Karn.
Tithi is the lunar day. A month is divided into two cycles of fifteen days each. Shukla Paksha is the bright fortnight when the Moon is waxing and growing.
Krishna Paksha is the dark fortnight when the Moon is waning. Vaar is simply the day of the week, each governed by a specific planet.
Nakshatra is the constellation the Moon occupies on that day. Yog is the angular relationship between the Moon and the Sun. And Karn is half of a Tithi, determining the quality of each half-day.
Together, these five create a complete picture of any given moment in time.
Panchang is the five-limbed Hindu almanac, the daily cosmic map that ancient India used to navigate time itself.
Every single day, these five elements combine to create a unique energetic signature. That signature tells you whether a given moment supports a specific kind of action or works against it.
Choosing your starting point using the Panchang is not about fear. It is about alignment. Starting work at the right moment is like catching the right current in a river rather than swimming against it.
The five elements of the Panchang are Tithi, Vaar, Nakshatra, Yog, and Karn.
Tithi is the lunar day. A month is divided into two cycles of fifteen days each. Shukla Paksha is the bright fortnight when the Moon is waxing and growing.
Krishna Paksha is the dark fortnight when the Moon is waning. Vaar is simply the day of the week, each governed by a specific planet.
Nakshatra is the constellation the Moon occupies on that day. Yog is the angular relationship between the Moon and the Sun. And Karn is half of a Tithi, determining the quality of each half-day.
Together, these five create a complete picture of any given moment in time.
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Now come to the practical rules that ancient texts laid down for finding a good Muhurta.
These are not complicated. They do not require years of study. Anyone who understands the basics can check them.
Avoid Sunday, Tuesday, and Saturday for important new beginnings. These days are governed by Sun, Mars, and Saturn respectively, all natural malefics in Vedic astrology. Their energy tends to create friction, delays, or obstacles when used to initiate new ventures rather than complete existing ones.
Avoid Krishna Paksha, the waning Moon fortnight, for starting significant new work. The Moon governs the mind and the flow of energy in the world. A waning Moon is a withdrawing Moon.
Starting something new during a withdrawing phase means the natural cosmic current is moving away from growth, away from expansion, away from new beginnings. Shukla Paksha, when the Moon is building toward fullness, carries the quality of increase and growth that new ventures need in their early stages.
Avoid Rikta Tithis. These are the 4th, 9th, and 14th lunar days of each fortnight.
Rikta in Sanskrit means empty or void. Ancient texts consistently mark these Tithis as inauspicious for starting anything of significance.
Also avoid certain Yogs that carry difficult energies: Vajr, Vyaghat, Shool, Vyatipat, Atigand, Vishkumbha, Gand, and Parid.
These Yogs are created by specific angular relationships between the Moon and Sun that produce friction, obstacles, or unpredictable outcomes for new activities initiated within them.
These are not complicated. They do not require years of study. Anyone who understands the basics can check them.
Avoid Sunday, Tuesday, and Saturday for important new beginnings. These days are governed by Sun, Mars, and Saturn respectively, all natural malefics in Vedic astrology. Their energy tends to create friction, delays, or obstacles when used to initiate new ventures rather than complete existing ones.
Avoid Krishna Paksha, the waning Moon fortnight, for starting significant new work. The Moon governs the mind and the flow of energy in the world. A waning Moon is a withdrawing Moon.
Starting something new during a withdrawing phase means the natural cosmic current is moving away from growth, away from expansion, away from new beginnings. Shukla Paksha, when the Moon is building toward fullness, carries the quality of increase and growth that new ventures need in their early stages.
Avoid Rikta Tithis. These are the 4th, 9th, and 14th lunar days of each fortnight.
Rikta in Sanskrit means empty or void. Ancient texts consistently mark these Tithis as inauspicious for starting anything of significance.
Also avoid certain Yogs that carry difficult energies: Vajr, Vyaghat, Shool, Vyatipat, Atigand, Vishkumbha, Gand, and Parid.
These Yogs are created by specific angular relationships between the Moon and Sun that produce friction, obstacles, or unpredictable outcomes for new activities initiated within them.
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For Nakshatras, ancient texts name specific ones that support auspicious beginnings.
Rohini, Uttara Phalguni, Uttara Ashada, Uttara Bhadrapada, Chitra, Anuradha, Mrigashirsha, Revati, Swati, Pushya, Dhanishta and Punarvasu are among the most consistently recommended for new work.
Different purposes benefit from different Nakshatras. Pushya Nakshatra is especially revered for beginnings connected to education and wealth.
Rohini is considered highly auspicious for anything connected to building and growth.
Hasta supports precision work and craftsmanship.
For those who find the full Panchang calculation complex at first, there is a simpler daily tool called Chogadiya (चौघड़िया).
Chogadiya divides each day from sunrise to sundown into eight equal parts. Each part carries a specific quality: Amrit, Kaal, Shubh, Labh, Udveg, Chand, Rog, and others.
Amrit means nectar. Starting work in Amrit Chogadiya is considered highly auspicious. Shubh means auspicious, Labh means gain.
These three are among the most recommended for important beginnings. Kaal carries the energy of time and restriction. Starting significant new work in Kaal Chogadiya is generally avoided.
This system is available on almost every Panchang app today and takes under a minute to check.
Rohini, Uttara Phalguni, Uttara Ashada, Uttara Bhadrapada, Chitra, Anuradha, Mrigashirsha, Revati, Swati, Pushya, Dhanishta and Punarvasu are among the most consistently recommended for new work.
Different purposes benefit from different Nakshatras. Pushya Nakshatra is especially revered for beginnings connected to education and wealth.
Rohini is considered highly auspicious for anything connected to building and growth.
Hasta supports precision work and craftsmanship.
For those who find the full Panchang calculation complex at first, there is a simpler daily tool called Chogadiya (चौघड़िया).
Chogadiya divides each day from sunrise to sundown into eight equal parts. Each part carries a specific quality: Amrit, Kaal, Shubh, Labh, Udveg, Chand, Rog, and others.
Amrit means nectar. Starting work in Amrit Chogadiya is considered highly auspicious. Shubh means auspicious, Labh means gain.
These three are among the most recommended for important beginnings. Kaal carries the energy of time and restriction. Starting significant new work in Kaal Chogadiya is generally avoided.
This system is available on almost every Panchang app today and takes under a minute to check.
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what makes this remedial measure genuinely different from every other remedy in the system ?
Every other process responds to a problem that has already manifested. A gemstone is worn after a planet is showing difficult results. A mantra is practiced after a challenging period has begun. Charity is given as a response to karmic debt being collected.
Muhurta operates differently. It is the one remedy that works before the problem arrives. By starting an activity at an aligned moment, you are not correcting a mistake. You are preventing the conditions that allow certain mistakes to form in the first place.
It is the difference between building on solid ground versus building on ground that will shift later.
Ancient texts describe this principle with a clarity that I find remarkable. A planet in its normal rotation through a particular constellation gives a certain set of results. In another zodiac position, it gives a unique set of results.
This is determined by wavelength and frequency, the specific energetic quality of that planetary position at that moment.
Choosing Muhurta is essentially choosing to begin your work during a frequency that supports its specific purpose. You are not changing fate. You are choosing which frequency of fate you step into at the starting point.
Every other process responds to a problem that has already manifested. A gemstone is worn after a planet is showing difficult results. A mantra is practiced after a challenging period has begun. Charity is given as a response to karmic debt being collected.
Muhurta operates differently. It is the one remedy that works before the problem arrives. By starting an activity at an aligned moment, you are not correcting a mistake. You are preventing the conditions that allow certain mistakes to form in the first place.
It is the difference between building on solid ground versus building on ground that will shift later.
Ancient texts describe this principle with a clarity that I find remarkable. A planet in its normal rotation through a particular constellation gives a certain set of results. In another zodiac position, it gives a unique set of results.
This is determined by wavelength and frequency, the specific energetic quality of that planetary position at that moment.
Choosing Muhurta is essentially choosing to begin your work during a frequency that supports its specific purpose. You are not changing fate. You are choosing which frequency of fate you step into at the starting point.
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There is a myth around Muhurta that i want to address here is - The belief that only pundits and learned scholars can calculate an auspicious time.
This belief has done more damage to this tradition than any amount of disbelief has.
The scriptures were written for the welfare of every human being without exception. The Panchang is a public document. Every detail needed to find a good Muhurta is freely available in any Panchang app, in any Hindu almanac, in any calendar that follows the Vedic system.
The knowledge was never meant to be locked behind specialist access. It was meant to be used by everyone for every important decision in daily life.
Now the next question people ask me frequently is that When is Muhurta worth checking?
The answer from classical texts is: for any activity where you want the best possible outcome.
Signing a property agreement. Starting construction of a home. Installing the main door or pillars. The Griha Pravesh or house warming ceremony. Purchasing a vehicle. Submitting important applications or admission papers. A child's first day of school. Starting a business. Launching a new project. Beginning a medical treatment.
Any moment that opens a new chapter carries the energetic signature of how that chapter will unfold. Starting it well costs nothing. The cost of starting it poorly can follow the venture for years.
This belief has done more damage to this tradition than any amount of disbelief has.
The scriptures were written for the welfare of every human being without exception. The Panchang is a public document. Every detail needed to find a good Muhurta is freely available in any Panchang app, in any Hindu almanac, in any calendar that follows the Vedic system.
The knowledge was never meant to be locked behind specialist access. It was meant to be used by everyone for every important decision in daily life.
Now the next question people ask me frequently is that When is Muhurta worth checking?
The answer from classical texts is: for any activity where you want the best possible outcome.
Signing a property agreement. Starting construction of a home. Installing the main door or pillars. The Griha Pravesh or house warming ceremony. Purchasing a vehicle. Submitting important applications or admission papers. A child's first day of school. Starting a business. Launching a new project. Beginning a medical treatment.
Any moment that opens a new chapter carries the energetic signature of how that chapter will unfold. Starting it well costs nothing. The cost of starting it poorly can follow the venture for years.
8
Something my own research and Consultations brought me to repeatedly is this observation - The people who dismissed Muhurta most confidently were often the same people who had stories about ventures that failed mysteriously despite every logical factor being in place.
The business that should have worked but never found its footing. The house that caused problems from the first month. The project that started with full resources and still somehow collapsed.
Timing is an invisible factor in every outcome. Ancient India simply made it visible and gave people a way to work with it consciously.
Here is the most important principle behind all of this. Muhurta is not about making the universe do what you want. It is about understanding that the universe is already moving in a specific direction at every moment, and intelligently choosing when to begin your movement so that you are moving with it rather than against it.
A sailor does not argue with the wind. A skilled sailor reads the wind and chooses when to set sail. Ancient India spent thousands of years studying the cosmic wind. The Panchang is that study, written down and made available to everyone willing to read it.
The business that should have worked but never found its footing. The house that caused problems from the first month. The project that started with full resources and still somehow collapsed.
Timing is an invisible factor in every outcome. Ancient India simply made it visible and gave people a way to work with it consciously.
Here is the most important principle behind all of this. Muhurta is not about making the universe do what you want. It is about understanding that the universe is already moving in a specific direction at every moment, and intelligently choosing when to begin your movement so that you are moving with it rather than against it.
A sailor does not argue with the wind. A skilled sailor reads the wind and chooses when to set sail. Ancient India spent thousands of years studying the cosmic wind. The Panchang is that study, written down and made available to everyone willing to read it.
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The remedy in its simplest form comes down to three things.
First, develop the will to learn this system rather than outsourcing it entirely to others.
Second, spend the time to understand the Panchang at a basic level, which genuinely does not take long.
Third, make a habit of checking the timing before beginning anything significant in your life.
Not obsessively, not with fear, but with the same natural intelligence you would use to check the weather before planning a long journey.
Timing is information. And using information well is not superstition. It has always been wisdom.
Bharat was once called Sone ki chidiya, the golden bird, not just for its resources or its trade but for the sophistication of its knowledge systems.
A civilization that could calculate the position of stars with precision before telescopes existed, that could map the relationship between cosmic cycles and human events with mathematical accuracy, that could develop a system for aligning human action with cosmic timing in a way that anyone could use, that civilization understood something about the relationship between time and outcome that the modern world is only beginning to approach.
Muhurta is that understanding, handed down intact. It costs nothing to use. And its price of ignoring it is paid slowly, invisibly, and always at the worst possible time.
First, develop the will to learn this system rather than outsourcing it entirely to others.
Second, spend the time to understand the Panchang at a basic level, which genuinely does not take long.
Third, make a habit of checking the timing before beginning anything significant in your life.
Not obsessively, not with fear, but with the same natural intelligence you would use to check the weather before planning a long journey.
Timing is information. And using information well is not superstition. It has always been wisdom.
Bharat was once called Sone ki chidiya, the golden bird, not just for its resources or its trade but for the sophistication of its knowledge systems.
A civilization that could calculate the position of stars with precision before telescopes existed, that could map the relationship between cosmic cycles and human events with mathematical accuracy, that could develop a system for aligning human action with cosmic timing in a way that anyone could use, that civilization understood something about the relationship between time and outcome that the modern world is only beginning to approach.
Muhurta is that understanding, handed down intact. It costs nothing to use. And its price of ignoring it is paid slowly, invisibly, and always at the worst possible time.
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So this was a brief about the Muhurata System.
It is not even the start of the Muhurata Knowledge, what exists in our tradition and in books.
The depth it holds and the amount of help it can offer you is unimaginable.
I tried to give you the basic glimpse of the muhurata system.
Hope it helps you.
It is not even the start of the Muhurata Knowledge, what exists in our tradition and in books.
The depth it holds and the amount of help it can offer you is unimaginable.
I tried to give you the basic glimpse of the muhurata system.
Hope it helps you.
11
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