FULL MOON IN HASTA & HANUMĀN JAYANTĪ
Artworkk: Pinterest
04.01 19:11 PDT | 04.02 7:41AM IST
The full moon (Pūrṇimā) in April rises in the Vedic lunar mansion of Hasta हस्त (Virgo), known as the Star of the Hand.
With the first full moon of the Vedic year, what was planted under the New Moon (Amāvasyā) in Uttara Bhādrapadā begins to be illumined—revealing the early architecture of a stable and enduring foundation taking form beneath the surface of awareness.
Here, that which has taken root begins to be shaped, refined, and brought into the field of conscious creation.
Hasta reveals itself through five stars of the Corvus constellation, forming what the ancient ṛṣis perceived as an open hand—five fingertips poised in space beneath Kanyā (Virgo), near the brilliance of Spica.
Sitting at the heart of an artha trikoṇa, ruled by Savitṛ, the life-giving solar intelligence, this constellation illumines the power of skilled creation—the capacity to shape, refine, and fashion something meaningful into form.
Its animal totem, the female buffalo, revered as a bearer of abundance and sustaining strength, reflects the quiet power to bring forth; its śakti, Hasta Sthāpanīyāgama, holds the energy to gain what one seeks and place it into the palm of the hand.
Channel your creativity, especially in tasks requiring skill and dexterity. This is a very mental nakṣatra—use discernment to align with higher thinking and listen to your intuition.
What is gained here, however, must be held with intelligence.
Artwork: Pinterest
This is not a nakṣatra of acquisition alone, but of right use. The hand is the instrument of karma—what reaches, receives, makes, tends, blesses, and builds—and what comes into it carries responsibility.
Skill here is cultivated, not assumed. It is intelligence refined through restraint, repetition, and guidance. This is the current of Gayatrī—an intelligence purified enough to illumine action without distortion, to move without waste, to act without losing alignment.
This nakṣatra carries a strong mental charge. When guided, the mind becomes precise, dexterous, capable of exacting execution. When unguided, that same intelligence fragments—overreaching, over-calculating, dissipating what it has the power to gather.
There is consequence here.
What comes into the hand may be stabilized and carried forward, or spent. Merit may be directed, or depleted. This is where impulse, indulgence, or misalignment exhaust what has been earned. What is received is not the completion—it is the beginning of a subtler test.
The hand holds two possibilities. It may close—grasping, clinging, attempting to control. Or it may remain open—steady, skillful, and in service. One depletes. The other learns how to hold.
There is also the question of guidance. Without right orientation, intelligence becomes manipulation, action becomes misaligned, and effort becomes excessive. With it, something else moves—clean, measured, exact.
Within the larger movement of this cycle, this full moon marks a point of quiet precision. We are approaching a time where what has been in motion begins to take form. But this is not a moment for hurried grasping. It is a moment for steadiness.
In Hasta, the transformation of material into beauty is exacting—it asks for attention, restraint, and right use of what has been given. What comes into the hand is not by accident—it reflects what has been prepared for, and how it is met determines whether it endures.
As you hold the vision of that which you would like to bring into fruition, return to this place. Neither grasping nor resisting. Neither forcing nor withdrawing.
Stay at the center of your own wheel—steady, inwardly anchored, and discerning.
We are approaching a time where things are able to land. What is already within reach now asks to be met with clarity. What takes form here carries forward. Hold it well.
Artwork: Pinterest
This full moon also marks the sacred observance of Hanuman Jayantī हनुमज्जयंती. Hanuman, the son of Vāyu (the wind god) and an ardent devotee of Rāmacandra, the seventh incarnation or āvatār of Lord Viṣṇu, is regarded as the embodiment of unwavering devotion, courage, humility, and selfless service.
जय श्री राम | jaya śrī rāma
All my Relations, Tulsi
दशमे युगे यतीनाम् ब्रह्मा भवति सारथिः॥
Daśame yuge yatīnām brahmā bhavati sārathiḥ.
For those established in self-referral consciousness, the infinite organizing power of the Creator becomes the charioteer of all action. - Ṛk Veda
Join us for our monthly Vidyā & Chai New Moon gathering, honoring the sacred observance of Akṣaya Tṛtīyā and attuning to the emergence of a potent new cycle under the New Moon in Aśvinī (Aries).
All are welcome
