Full Moon in Anurādhā: The Star of Success

FULL MOON IN ANURĀDHĀ

Artwork: Krishna Combs Radha's Hair. Punjab Hills, c. 1820.

05.31.26

The Full Moon पूर्णिमा arises beneath the Vedic lunar mansion of Anurādhā अनुराधा (Scorpio), the Star of Success. This constellation reminds us that what is cultivated with devotion, patience, and sincerity eventually bears fruit.

Governed by Mitra, Devatā of friendship, harmony, and sacred alliance, this Nakṣatra illuminates the bonds, commitments, and shared purposes that unite individuals in meaningful relationship.

Recognized by the ancient Ṛṣis through the stars Acrab, Isidis, and Pi Scorpionis, whose staff-like formation rests within the heart of Scorpio, Anurādhā carries the power to unite individuals through friendship, devotion, and shared purpose.

Symbolized by the triumphal archway and the female deer, Anurādhā reveals both attainment and receptivity. The archway signifies success achieved through sustained effort, while the deer embodies the sensitivity, awareness, and gentle vigilance required to navigate the deeper terrain of the heart.

Artwork:Pinterest — Mitra

The refinements initiated beneath the New Moon in Kṛttikā now begin to reveal their fruits. What was offered into the sacred fire for purification, release, and transformation may now be seen with greater clarity as the light of the Full Moon illuminates what has taken root.

Known in certain traditions as the Rohiṇī of the underworld, Anurādhā marks a movement toward the Nivṛtti Mārga—the inward path. Here, the journey turns from outer attainment toward inner realization, inviting awareness beneath the surface of appearances and into the deeper chambers of the heart. Often symbolized as a cave, this Nakṣatra reminds us that the most enduring discoveries are not found through outward acquisition, but through sincere self-inquiry, devotion, and the courage to encounter what has remained hidden.

Anurādhā holds rādhāna śakti, the energy to turn the unconscious conscious, empowered through worship. Like the lotus that rises from the mud toward the light of the Sun, this Nakṣatra reminds us that transformation unfolds gradually through steady cultivation. It teaches that even the smallest spark of sincere devotion can illuminate the path ahead and awaken a thirst for deeper understanding. Be courageous enough to descend into what has remained unseen and bring it into the light of awareness.

With Jupiter, Mercury, and Venus conjoined in Gemini during Adhika Māsa, a deeper dialogue between the individual and the Divine becomes possible. This rare convergence favors self-inquiry, contemplation, and the refinement of understanding, creating fertile ground for insight to arise through study, reflection, and sincere devotion. 

All my Relations, Tulsi

Full Moon May 31st: 1:45am PST | 14:15 IST

Vaikāsi Viśākam: Appearance Day of Lord Murugan

VAIKĀSI VIŚĀKAM

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May 29/30 | வைசாகி விசாகம்



Commencing as the Moon transits Viśākhā Nakṣatra, the Star of Purpose, during the Tamil month of Vaikāsi, Vaikāsi Viśākam commemorates the divine appearance of Lord Murugan—Skanda, Kārttikeya, and Subrahmaṇya—the radiant son of Śiva and Pārvatī, wielder of the Vel, commander of the celestial armies, and protector of dharma.

Viśākhā, symbolized by the triumphal arch, signifies attainment after sustained effort and the realization that follows unwavering pursuit. Governed by Indra and Agni, this Nakṣatra carries the power to pursue a chosen aim with determination, devotion, and disciplined action until it bears fruit. Its śakti, Vyāpana Śakti, is the power to achieve many and varied fruits.

When the devas could no longer withstand the growing tyranny of Tārakāsura, they sought refuge in Lord Śiva. A boon had rendered the asura nearly invincible, for only a son born of Śiva could defeat him.

From the intensity of Śiva's tapas emerged a radiant and unbearable fire, a force so powerful that neither heaven nor earth could contain it. Agni, Devatā of sacred fire and ruler of Kṛttikā Nakṣatra (New Moon of May), became the bearer of this divine radiance.

From this fiery essence emerged six luminous children who were nurtured and protected by the Kṛttikās, the wives of the Ṛṣis whose stars illuminate the heavens as the radiant cluster known today as the Pleiades. Through these celestial mothers, Murugan receives the name Kārttikeya—"He who was raised by the Kṛttikās."

When Devī Pārvatī gathered the six children into her embrace, they became one—Ṣaṇmukha, the Six-Faced Lord, whose vision extends in every direction and whose awareness perceives all dimensions simultaneously.

Before his battle against the forces of adharma, Pārvatī bestowed upon Murugan the Vel, the sacred spear that would become his defining emblem. More than a weapon, it represents jñāna śakti—the power of divine wisdom to pierce ignorance and reveal truth. Sharp, luminous, and unwavering, the Vel embodies discernment, courage, and spiritual clarity.

Known as the Star of Fire, Kṛttikā is governed by Agni and possesses Dāhana Śakti, the power to burn, purify, and transform. Associated with Lord Murugan (Kārttikeya)—God of War, wielder of the spear, and rider of the peacock—this Nakṣatra embodies courage, directed intelligence, and spiritual refinement. 

Its symbols—the razor, blade, and sacred flame—speak to the refinement that occurs when what is no longer aligned is offered into the fire. The blade of Kṛttikā severs what has completed its purpose, clearing the way for aligned emergence and the restoration of dharma.

Born from divine fire, nurtured beneath the watch of the Kṛttikās, and united through the grace of Pārvatī, Murugan emerges as the warrior sage destined to restore balance and protect dharma.

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In time, Murugan would defeat both Tārakāsura and the formidable asura Sūrapadma. Yet the deeper teaching lies not merely in conquest, but in transformation. From Sūrapadma emerged the peacock that serves as Murugan's vāhana and the rooster that adorns his banner, revealing the capacity of divine wisdom to transform even opposition into an instrument of awakening.

In Jyotiṣa, Murugan is associated with Maṅgala Graha, carrier of Agni Tattva—governing courage, protection, decisive action, and dhāraṇā, the capacity to gather one's awareness upon a singular aim.

ॐ सरवणभवाय नमः

Om Saravaṇabhavāya Namaḥ

All My Relations

Padminī Ekādaśī

PADMINĪ EKĀDAŚĪ

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पद्मिनी एकादशी | 05.26

Falling on the eleventh lunar day of the bright half of Adhika Māsa — the intercalary month received by Viṣṇu as Purushottama — this Ekādaśī arises only when the lunar calendar itself expands. It appears once every 32 months at most, and some years not at all. That rarity is not incidental. It is the teaching.

The Story

In the Treta Yuga, King Kṛtavīrya ruled the kingdom of Māhiṣmatī with righteousness and care for his people. He had performed powerful yajñas, given generously in dāna, and fulfilled every outer duty of dharma. And yet, across a hundred wives, across years of prayer, no son came to carry the lineage forward. The weight of that absence followed him everywhere.

Unable to remain still in his grief, he left the palace. His first queen, Padminī, went with him into the forest. Not as a passive companion but as a seeker in her own right. Together they undertook severe austerities for years. Still, no blessing came.

It was Padminī who moved what the years of tapas could not.

In the forest, she encountered the sage-consort Anasuya, who perceived what the queen and king had not yet understood: that the specific timing of their observance had been missing. Anasuya revealed to Padminī the hidden power of this Ekādaśī — the one that only opens when time itself expands, within Adhika Māsa.

Padminī received the vrata vidhi with full attention and observed it exactly as instructed.

She fasted completely. She remained awake through the night in vigil. She held unbroken remembrance of Hari. Lord Viṣṇu appeared before her.

He turned to her husband and said: Ask for what you desire. Your queen’s devotion has moved me.

The king asked for a son — one who could not be defeated by gods, serpents, or demons. The boon was granted. In time, Queen Padminī gave birth to Kartavīryārjuna, a warrior so formidable that even Rāvaṇa could not overcome him.

This is the lineage of this day. Not passive waiting, but a queen’s precise and disciplined love moving karma itself.

The Significance

Padminī Ekādaśī carries a quality distinct from the 24 regular Ekādaśīs of the year. Because it falls within Adhika Māsa — itself already understood as a sattvic and spiritually amplified period, a “time outside time” — this observance is considered doubly potent in the tradition.

Adhika Māsa is the lunar calendar’s correction, the extra month inserted approximately every 32 months to realign the lunar and solar years. In the Purāṇic understanding, this month belongs to Viṣṇu as Purushottama — the supreme, beyond the ordinary count. What is offered here carries amplified karmic weight. Even subtle acts of restraint, remembrance, and inner stillness register more deeply than usual.

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The Traditional Themes of this Ekādaśī:

Purification of karmic residue — particularly subtle attachments, memory imprints, and relational entanglements that have outlasted their purpose.

Dhārmic realignment — a recalibration back to one’s own right path during a window where the field itself is more receptive.

Inner restraint as grace — fasting, night vigil, and devotional recitation not as force, but as a quiet clearing.

Ekādaśī has long been understood within the tradition as a tithi uniquely suited for vrata, japa, and inward practice. As the Moon’s influence upon the body’s jala-tattva lessens, the system naturally becomes lighter, quieter, and more receptive to subtle states of awareness. For this reason, fasting on Ekādaśī is not approached merely as dietary restraint, but as a refinement of prāṇa itself — a temporary withdrawal from density in service of remembrance.

The Practice

The practice is simple in form. Its depth is in the sincerity brought to it. Fast from grains and beans. Those who cannot fast fully may observe a fruit and water fast, or reduce food to one simple meal taken with intention.

Chant the names of Hari throughout the day — Viṣṇu Sahasranāma, nāma japa, or simply the continuous inner repetition of Om Namo Bhagavate Vāsudevāya.

Remain awake through the night of Ekādaśī in remembrance. Sleep on this night is traditionally said to break the vrata.

Break the fast the following morning, on Dvādaśī, after sunrise.

ॐ नमो भगवते वासुदेवाय ॥

Tithi:

5/25 — 16:41 PST through 5/26 — 18:25 PST

5/26 — 5:11 IST through 5/27 — 6:22 IST

Vrata is traditionally observed on the day when the Ekādaśī tithi is present at sunrise in your location.

Gaṅgā Daśamī: The Descent of Gaṅgā Devī

GAṄGĀ DAŚAMĪ

Artwork: King Bhagīratha and the Goddess Gaṅgā, Jaipur, 18th century | Sotheby’s

05.25.26

This sacred observance falls upon the Daśamī tithi, the tenth lunar day of the waxing Moon in Jyeṣṭha, commemorating the Gaṅgāvatāraṇa — the descent of Gaṅgā Devī from the celestial realms into Earth.

Her descent did not arise casually, nor through the merit of kings alone, but through generations of unresolved karma carried within the Ikṣvāku lineage.

The story begins with King Sagara, whose sixty thousand sons followed the consecrated horse of the Aśvamedha yajña into the subterranean realms. There, beside the horse, sat Ṛṣi Kapila immersed in samādhi — absorbed in the stillness born of immeasurable tapas.

Blinded by pride, the princes accused the Ṛṣi of theft and disturbed his meditation.

Kapila opened his eyes.

In that single glance, charged with the fire of perfected tapas, all sixty thousand were reduced to ash. Their bodies perished instantly, yet their souls remained suspended — neither liberated nor returned to the ancestral realms.

Sagara’s grandson Aṃśumān sought the counsel of Kapila and learned that only the waters of Gaṅgā could release them. He could not bring her down. His son Dilīpa also failed. At last the undertaking passed to Dilīpa’s son, Bhagīratha.

Renouncing the throne, Bhagīratha entered the Himālayas and undertook austerities for thousands of years until Brahmā granted Gaṅgā’s descent.

Yet another obstacle remained.

Shiva Bearing The Descent Of The Ganges River - C. 1740

The force of Gaṅgā descending from the celestial realms would have shattered the Earth itself. Bhagīratha therefore turned to Śiva, the great ascetic, Mahākāla, Lord of Time, beseeching him to receive her.

Śiva consented.

Gaṅgā descended with immense force into his jaṭā, where her currents became bound within the labyrinth of his matted locks. Only after long ages did Śiva gently release her streams upon the Earth.

Bhagīratha walked before her across mountains, forests, and sacred lands until at last her waters reached the ashes of his ancestors in Pātāla.

The moment Gaṅgā touched them, sixty thousand souls were liberated.

For this reason she is worshipped on Gaṅgā Daśamī as Daśa Hara — “She who removes ten sins” — dissolving accumulated impurities of thought, speech, and action.

The phrase Bhāgīratha prayatnam, “Bhagīratha’s effort,” remains in Bhāratiya tradition as the measure of unwavering and seemingly impossible endeavour undertaken in devotion.

Artowrk: Pinterest

What this observance reveals is that certain prayers move across generations. Aṃśumān and Dilīpa carried it. Bhagīratha completed it — Through sustained tapas, the impossible was finally drawn from heaven into Earth.

May we remember what is worthy of such perseverance.

Oṁ Gaṅgāyai Namaḥ | Jaya Bhāgīrathī