Full Moon Lunar Eclipse in Pūrva Phālgunī: The Fruit of the Tree

FULL MOON LUNAR ECLIPSE

Pahari Style, Punjab Hills, c.1750

03.03.2026

Eclipse season culminates with a total lunar eclipse (candra grahaṇam चन्द्र ग्रहणम्) on March 3rd in the Vedic Lunar Mansion of Pūrva Phālgunī पूर्वफल्गुनी (Sidereal Leo) — the Fruit of the Tree.

Lunar eclipses are thresholds. The veil between seen and unseen grows thin; what is ready to be healed rises to the surface. This cycle urges us to refine our inner compass, untangle an old karmic pattern, and release what no longer belongs in our becoming.

Emotions may heighten. Truths long concealed come to light. With the Moon eclipsed, we may find ourselves at a crossroads — uncertain, weary, or on the verge of change. Yet within this threshold is a promise: a shift in trajectory. A recalibration of desire.

In Sanskrit, phala means fruit, and guṇī relates to qualities. Represented by the legs of a bed or a hammock, activated by Venus, this constellation symbolizes rest, pleasure, and the enjoyment of merit earned through past action. Its deity is Bhaga — the bestower of delight, distributive fortune, and the capacity to savor what has been given. It is also counted among the birth stars of Guru and Maṅgala.

Pūrva Phālgunī carries Prajānanda Śakti — the power of procreation, the union of polar opposites, the fertilizing current that enlivens creativity and sensual intelligence. Yet under an eclipse, we are asked to examine where pleasure has become attachment, where rest has become stagnation, and where desire has quietly shaped destiny — especially within our relational bonds.

This star governs union. And under shadow, union reveals its karma.

Bondage with others may surface. Personal prabhā intensifies — exposing and burning relational patterns formed through projection, entanglement, or unconscious exchange.

The star of fertility is both courageous and visionary, much like its bird medicine, the eagle. This eclipse awakens within the heart the courage to face the tests and initiations presented to us — urging us to rise above the shadows of past experiences and open to a higher vantage point.

When we pursue what we truly desire, tests and traumas often arise to meet us. Many are standing at a threshold of major transition — confronting the unknown, reassessing the architecture of life itself.

All activity depends on periods of non-activity.

After facing worldly battles and fulfilling our duties and responsibilities, there follows a necessary period of rest, relaxation, and integration. Pūrva Phālgunī teaches that complex problems can be resolved in a relaxed state, and that yoga trains us to be at ease in the presence of the Unknown. This period serves as the muse that kindles our creative intelligence and effortless action.

The Yogasūtra (2.47) affirms that through the relaxation of effort and absorption in the infinite, action becomes effortless — rooted in Being itself

This eclipse is not merely about creative momentum. It is about creative maturity. It is about refining how we love, how we create, how we seek enjoyment — merging practicality with pleasure, sovereignty with union.

This is a potent window for deep personal sādhana — especially where the eclipse is visible (United States, parts of Europe, Africa, and South America). The ancients regarded eclipses as sacred intervals — consuming less, fasting, turning inward, and safeguarding the subtle body so that the inner channels remain clear.

Keep life simple during the eclipse hours. Favor restraint. Fasting, meditation, mantra japa, and contemplative silence are recommended. For most, it is wise to postpone major decisions and commitments until the eclipse has passed — ideally allowing the energy to land and integrate through 03.21.

A breakthrough awaits. Old patterns may resurface — resist grasping. Let them dissolve.

What familiar relational holding pattern is ready to be released?

Total Lunar Eclipse in Pūrva Phālgunī (Leo)
3:37 AM PST | 17:07 IST

Eclipse window:
00:44–06:23 AM PST
14:14–19:53 IST


Holi, Mahā Lakṣmī Jayantī, and Gaura Pūrṇimā


This Full Moon, the Pūrṇimā (पूर्णिमा) of the month of Phālguṇa, also marks the convergence of several auspicious Vedic observances — Holī, Mahā Lakṣmī Jayantī, and Gaura Pūrṇimā — each carrying its own current of renewal and revelation.

This festival not only marks the arrival of Spring but also signifies the triumph of dharma over adharma—good over evil—and the Holī, the Festival of Colors, is deeply intertwined with the theme of the eternal and divine love between Rādhā and Kṛṣṇa (the 8th avatāra of Lord Viṣṇu), symbolized by the playful act of adorning one another’s faces with vibrant hues.

This festival not only marks the arrival of Spring but also signifies the triumph of dharma over adharma — good over evil — and the ascendancy of sattva (the creative, harmonious force) over tamas (ignorance and destruction).

Mahā Lakṣmī Jayantī honors the divine manifestation of Goddess Lakṣmī during the Samudra Manthana, the great churning of the Ocean of Milk. The Devas and Asuras labored in opposition to obtain Amṛta, revealing both poison and treasure in the process. 

When Mahā Lakṣmī emerged from the ocean, she immediately took residence in Lord Viṣṇu’s heart. Her appearance bestows eightfold blessings, embodying abundance and devotion, guiding devotees toward both prosperity and spiritual well-being and the grace of making the right decision.

Gaura Pūrṇimā commemorates the birth of Śrī Caitanya Mahāprabhu, a seminal figure within the bhakti traditions of India. Born during a Lunar Eclipse in West Bengal, Mahāprabhu is understood as the combined incarnation of Lord Kṛṣṇa and His foremost devotee, Śrīmatī Rādhārāṇī. His descent carried a twofold purpose: to taste the depth of Rādhā’s love for Kṛṣṇa and to reveal the path of wholehearted surrender through nāma-saṅkīrtana.

All My Relations

Mercury Retrograde in Pūrvabhādrapadā: The Scorching Star

MERCURY RETROGRADE

02.26-03.21

Budha Graha (Mercury) stations retrograde on February 26th in the Vedic lunar mansion of Pūrvabhādrapadā पूर्वभाद्रपदा (Aquarius), the Scorching Star — punctuating a passage of deep reflection, reimagination, and renewal.

As the one who bestows discernment, Budha retrograde invites you to return to the center of your wheel, and as he retraces his steps through Pūrvabhādrapadā, what has already been set into motion gathers weight, asking to be met with greater clarity and consequence.

Pūrva Bhādrapadā is symbolized by metamorphosis, rebirth, tapas (penance), perseverance, and undifferentiated spiritual fire — the kind that has the capacity to raise our consciousness. As one of the birth stars of Mercury, it represents the churning of the chaos and turmoil of fragmentation that births the wisdom of neutrality.

The Burning Pair’s deity (Aja Ekapāda) stands on one leg and has two heads — split yet able to see in both directions — bridging heaven and earth through elevation and sacrifice.

Holding Yajamāna Udyamana Śakti — the power of elevation through sacrifice — Pūrvabhādrapadā initiates an alchemical refinement of raw potential. Through discipline and renunciation, this energy is transformed into awakened wisdom. 

This nakṣatra does not merely demand confrontation with duality; it invites us into a dance of integration, where material ambition and spiritual transcendence find their rightful place.

How we manage vast reservoirs of life force energy becomes the defining arc of this cycle, shaping our capacity to channel intensity into focused intention. Yet the cultivation of inner contentment amidst this dynamic flux is equally vital. 

Symbolized by a funeral pyre, we stand at the precipice of transformation, where the purifying fire of Rūdra dissolves illusion.

Coinciding with the Lunar Eclipse in Leo and accompanied by four other grahas, this passage through Pūrvabhādrapadā heightens its fire, bringing identity, authorship, and intention into sharper focus. What has been extreme seeks tempering. What has been scattered seeks coherence. What has been initiated now demands conscious integration.

It is a period of intellectual purification, where communication is tested and refined — not for speed, but for depth. Unresolved matters from the past — especially those placed on the back burner — may resurface, seeking resolution through contemplation rather than reaction. Through introspection and surrender, the trials of this transit lead not to confusion, but to spiritual illumination and ultimate liberation.

Mercury steps back into Śatabhiṣak on march 10th and stations direct there on March 21st, consolidating what has been clarified in flame and stabilizing the insight that emerged during the eclipse portal, guiding it into a landing space of integration, completion, and practical alignment.

With this stabilization, the energy ignited during this cycle officially sets the year of the Fire Horse ablaze, propelling what has been revealed into motion.

We are stepping powerfully into a new timeline. Some karmas are requesting completion, release, and unraveling. Return to the center of your wheel and step into greater balance and neutrality.

All My Relations

 ॐ ब्रां ब्रीं ब्रौं सः बुधाय नमः

Slow things down and they become more beautiful - David Lynch 

New Moon Solar Eclipse in Dhaniṣṭhā: The Star of Symphony

New Moon Solar Eclipse in Dhaniṣṭhā

Artwork: Pinterest

February 17th

Eclipse season commences with the new moon in the Vedic lunar mansion of Dhaniṣṭhā (sidereal Aquarius), the Star of Symphony. Expect disciplined ambition and the maturation of long-term goals.

This cycle moves with rhythm and restraint, calling us to awaken and proceed one-pointedly toward what truly matters. This eclipse occurs with five planets in Aquarius — the Sun and Moon joined by three additional grahas (mercury, venus and Rāhu) intensifying the field of delivery.

The points where the Sun and Moon intersect the ecliptic plane, positioned exactly 180 degrees apart, are known as the lunar nodes — Rāhu and Ketu in Jyotiṣa. These shadowy grahas, often called the great awakeners, govern eclipses and symbolize the eternal dance between light and darkness. They confront us with what has been concealed, disrupt stagnant patterns, and offer the opportunity to awaken to deeper truths along our journey.

Solar eclipses expose that which has been hidden from view and set the tone as an omen of the energies for the next six months. A spiritual culmination unfolds, signaling transformative endings and the potential for new beginnings — inviting introspection, healing, and the initiation of new creative endeavors. This cycle urges us to refine our inner compass, untangle and release an old karmic pattern.

Dhaniṣṭhā, zenith of Maṅgala, is traced across the night sky by four luminous stars in Delphinus, arranged in a perfect rhombus — Śiva’s ḍamaru poised beneath the canopy of stars.

As the drum of Mahākāla, keeper of time, its beat measures the birth and dissolution of worlds. In the ancient telling, when its cadence shifts, the old order falls away and a new one is born. We are no longer standing at the threshold; we are dancing to a new drummer.

Dhaniṣṭhā lands between Capricorn and Aquarius, both rāśis of Śani. Ruled by the Aṣṭa Vasus — elemental deities of abundance (Vasu meaning “wealth” or “brightness”) — it carries Kṣepayitrī Śakti, the power to bestow fame and prosperity. Activated by Maṅgala, it contains his uccha point and, in certain traditions, is remembered as a birth star of both Guru and Budha.

What is revealed now invites you to reassess and consciously redesign the physical architecture of your life with greater awareness. Accelerated spiritual growth becomes possible when we allow ourselves time to introspect. Some pattern has been attempting to surface for completion and healing. Create space to meet it with steadiness.

We have been preparing the soil through the discipline and inward focus of Sūrya in Makara — now we enter a time of action.

Like the drum itself — hollow, receptive, precisely tuned, neither too tight nor too loose — this affluent asterism teaches that the pulse flows through what is emptied. When we become a conduit for Source, when we become as a hollow bone, the rhythms of the universe move through us more effortlessly.

As the drum shifts hands and the cadence changes, step into receptivity. Trust in the presence of the Unknown and attune your awareness to the shifting pulse. Act when the rhythm calls.

During eclipse windows, for most, it is traditionally advised to postpone major auspicious undertakings such as marriage or business ventures. However, it is an ideal time for sādhanā.

Eclipses stir duality to initiate purification — a necessary process through which self-knowledge is deepened and stabilized. Any turbulence you feel is part of this alchemy.

During this eclipse window, keep life simple. Stay grounded. Rest. Reflect on what is being revealed and what needs untangling.

The ancients taught that any practice undertaken during an eclipse bears fruit a thousandfold. In this sacred window, they consumed less — physically and mentally — to keep their channels clear. With the Sun and Moon — our sources of prāṇa — obscured, this becomes a potent time for:

  • Mantra chanting

  • Meditation & breathwork

  • Prayer & fasting

  • Turning inward, rather than outward

It is also recommended to bathe before and after the eclipse to cleanse both body and mind, allowing for a smoother energetic transition.

Trust that this cycle serves as an initiation, sowing the seeds of transformation that will blossom in divine timing, guiding you into the next phase of your journey.

Pay close attention if you have major planets — your Sun, Moon, or Lagna — in Dhanishtha. This cycle may bring sudden change, an unanticipated turning point, or the revelation of something deeper within. Also take note if you are currently running a dāśā or antar dāśā of Rāhu, Ketu, Sun, Moon, or Maṅgala.

All My Relations, Tulsi

ॐ तत्पुरुषाय विद्महे
महादेवाय धीमहि
तन्नो रुद्रः प्रचोदयात् ॥

Om Tatpuruṣāya Vidmahe
Mahādevāya Dhīmahi
Tanno Rudraḥ Prachodayāt ॥

New Moon: Dhaniṣṭhā (Aquarius)
February 17th | 04:01 AM PST | 17:32 IST

Eclipse Timing:
1:56–6:27 AM PST | 15:26–19:57 IST

"In order to establish order, disorder has to be shaken; and for shaking to remain under control, we who are at the basis, at the level of Para, have to be Para – that is, unreachable by the surface turmoil. In that integrated state, the fast moving chaos and change will pass away in a steady manner.

So, we have to be very steady. We have to be very careful not to get upset by little or big things. If we lose our basis, our dignity, the phase transition will take much longer.

Don't give importance to things which may upset us. This is a very precious time for the world. Everything depends on how our awareness is; just don't let it be shaken. Our awareness is the basis of all these transformations. More than ever before, time demands we remain completely ourselves. It is a very tender, delicate time for us - we should not become angry, indifferent, or sad; we should just be like an ocean. The evolutionary power is waking up.

We shake it, then leave it; then after some time shake it again. Each time a new level of purity, awakening, is added.”

~ Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

Mahāśivarātri: The Great Night of Lord Śiva

MAHĀŚIVARĀTRI

Painting from Mankot, Himachal Pradesh, c. 1700–1725. Held at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

February 15th

Mahāśivarātri, observed on the Caturdaśī tithi (14th lunar day) of the Kṛṣṇa Pakṣa (dark half) in the Māgha or Phālguna month, is one of the most spiritually activated days in the Vedic calendar. This night is celebrated as the great night of Lord Śiva, where he performs his heavenly dance and relieves us from our karmic burdens.

It is said that any spiritual practices performed on this day, including mantra recitation (especially Śiva mantras), fasting, and deep meditation, are enhanced a thousandfold during this auspicious time. The late hours of the night, in particular, are said to be charged with intense spiritual potency. Whoever fasts on this day, Lord Śiva will relieve you of the poisons and karmic debts accumulated in this life and all previous incarnations.

Mahāśivarātri is a profound and sacred observance dedicated to Lord Śiva, the eternal consciousness that dissolves illusion and grants liberation. Śiva is revered as Ādi Yogi—the first yogin, the primordial teacher of yoga—who embodies both the origin of the path and its culmination in absolute freedom.

He is also honored as Ādi Vaidya—the first physician—source of Āyurveda and the healing sciences, revealed in sacred dialogue to Pārvatī, through whom this wisdom descended into the world. The timing of Mahāśivarātri is deeply significant, as the waning moon symbolizes the dissolution of the ego, inviting seekers to surrender to the infinite stillness of Śiva.

The timing of Mahāśivarātri is deeply significant, as the waning moon symbolizes the dissolution of the ego, inviting seekers to surrender to the infinite stillness of Śiva. 

One perspective views this night as the moment when Śiva entered deep meditation, embodying the stillness that dissolves all illusions. It is believed that on this night, the cosmic energies align in a way that makes it highly conducive for inner awakening and meditation.

Mahāśivarātri is also believed to be the sacred night when Lord Śiva and Goddess Pārvatī were united in divine marriage. This marks the cosmic union of Śiva—the embodiment of pure consciousness—and Śakti—the dynamic force of creation. Their union is symbolized in the divine dance of Śiva, an eternal cycle of creation, preservation, and destruction, where stillness and movement coexist in harmony. This dance represents the interplay of the infinite and the finite, the unchanging and the ever-changing, reflecting the unity of opposites in the universe.

Devotees observe Mahāśivarātri with jāgaraṇa (night-long vigil), abhiṣeka (ritual bathing of the Śiva Liṅgam), and chanting of the Pañcākṣarī mantra—"Oṁ Namaḥ Śivāya." Fasting, silence, and deep contemplation allow one to align with Śiva's transcendental essence, shedding layers of karma and moving closer to mokṣa (liberation).

This night is a gateway to the formless, where the dissolution of duality reveals the pure consciousness that pervades all. It is a night of transformation, where the aspirant, like the moon waning into darkness, merges into the luminous presence of Śiva—the Supreme Reality.

Artowrk: Pinterest

ॐ नमः शिवाय | Oṁ Namaḥ Śivāya 🔱

The Chaturdashi Tithi (the 14th lunar day required for Mahāśivarātri) begins on the afternoon of the 15th and lasts until the afternoon of the 16th:  Chaturdashi Tithi Begins: 17:05 PM IST on Feb 15, 2026. Chaturdashi Tithi Ends: 17:34 PM IST on Feb 16, 2026.

Main Midnight Puja (Nishita Kaal): 12:09 AM to 1:01 AM on Feb 16. * Fast-Breaking (Parana): 6:59 AM to 3:24 PM on Feb 16. 

Pulse of the Stars: Vidyā & Chai

Join us for our monthly New Moon gathering for a deep dive into Mahāśivarātri, the New Moon in Dhaniṣṭā (Aquarius) and preparation for upcoming eclipse season, mercury retrograde

RSVP: tulsibagnoli@gmail.com

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