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Punarvasu Nakshatra - Star Of Returning Home

Here is the first video in the series of classes on Punarvasu that I am teaching currently in my nakshatra course. If you are interested in learning more, check out the patreon link to this course and all of my courses below. ॐ नमो भगवतॆ वासुदेवाय Thank You for watching! May the Goddess Aditi bless you with wealth and happiness! Click here to access the full Vedic Astrology and Yogic Philosophy course, as well as all my courses for $30/month along with a free monthly forecast for the 12 signs!   / eyeoftheveda   If you like my work, buy me a coffee or chai rather! https://buymeacoffee.com/eyeoftheveda (Taken from the course manual...) PUNARVASU NAKSHATRA Now we come to Punarvasu Nakshatra, the "Return of the good". See the manual for all the details, some of which are reproduced here. “The restoration of good [punarvasu] for aditi (The Undivided) is wind [vātaḥ] from above and moisture [ārdram] from below.” Punarvasu is a Sanskrit word that means “the restoration of the good”, but has many layers of meaning that should be contemplated. Its helpful to break this word down. Punar can mean “once again” or like how we put “re” in front of a word to indicate doing it again, in Sanskrit punar means the same thing. Vasu means many things but refers to light and shining, radiance. Vasu means “excellent, good, beneficient, sweet, dry, anything that shines, or any desirable, precious object. Vasu refers to any riches, wealth, goods, gold, jewels, gems, or property. Vasu is also a name for the Gods that rule Dhanishta nakshatra, which is also a nakshatra that gives a lot of wealth, radiance, and desirable, shining qualities to a person. Vasu comes from the vedic root “vas” which means “to shine” or “to grow bright” and refers to the dawn. Vasu can thus mean anything that exists that is desirable, or anything that exists and is perceivable or shines and grows bright like the rising sun. It can refer to a person too, not just an object, but anything. So it is about the return of the bright perceivable and desirable thing. Punarvasu together means the return of the light, or the return of the good. It can also mean the return of the goods, as in the sense of valuables. At Ardra, we had the destruction and purifying storm of Rudra. Now the energy is cleansed and ripe for the the return of the excellent, precious, desirable thing. Thats what punarvasu represents. As such, this can be a great star for when one needs to select a muhurta to do something that involves renewal, rejuvenation, or returning something to its previous splendor. Wind and Moisture do bring fresh, new energy and life into creation, so it makes sense that this star would correlate to that. The symbol is a bow, or a house. It is said to have a bow symbol because a bow can spread out and is moving and unsteady like this asterism, and the infinite nature of Aditi. A bow is also something that is returned back to its place after it is shot. But the problem is the next asterism is also symbolized as an arrow, and then we also have Sagittarius, the bow sign already, so I feel the bow symbol is a bit overused, and may be an embellishment. Pushya if anything makes more sense for the bow and arrow nakshatra, as we will describe later. The symbol of a house seems to be the more vivid picture of punarvasu. If you look at Punarvasu in the sky, it is the stars Castor and Pollux. These stars make up a square that looks just like a little house up in the heavens. A house and abode of the Mother goddess, Aditi. We will find that Punarvasu has a very nurturing, and restorative, rejuvenating energy. It does not have a strong warlike energy, or long term purposeful aiming quality that a bow and arrow would symbolize. Punarvasu is about returning back to the good and desirable thing. Thats what our Home is. The symbolism is very obvious. We go to work, we get beat up by life, working hard and exhausting ourselves. Then we leave our work, and seek the rejuvenation of our home. We “return again” to our home, just like what this star is named after. We go back to our home because it is the place the nourishes us. It is where (ideally) our Goddess literally lives in the form of our loving wife, if we are lucky enough to have one. Punarvasu is therefore THE nakshatra of finding a home, or returning back to home after a long journey, etc. Click here to see the reading options I offer: http://eyeoftheveda.com/astrological-... Other media: https://linktr.ee/eyeoftheveda   / eyeoftheveda     / eyeoftheveda     / coreydowds   https://t.me/eyeoftheveda (telegram updates) Click here for more info on learning to meditate: http://eyeoftheveda.com/learn-to-medi...

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