Eclipses in Vedic Astrology
Eclipses happen when the Sun and Moon align near Rahu or Ketu. They can intensify change, visibility, endings, beginnings, and karmic turning points.
What Eclipses Show
Eclipses are not ordinary new moons or full moons. They happen near the lunar nodes, Rahu and Ketu, which can amplify desire, disruption, release, confusion, and sudden clarity. This is why eclipse seasons often feel charged or unusual.
The point is not to be afraid of eclipses. The point is to notice what is being activated. Which house is involved? Is the eclipse near a natal planet? Is it connected to your Moon, Ascendant, or current dasha? Those details matter more than generic eclipse predictions.
How To Work With Eclipses
Eclipse periods are usually better for observation than forcing major decisions. If something is loud, intense, or unclear, give it time. Let the dust settle before deciding what the event meant.
Practically, simplify your schedule, reduce overstimulation, and pay attention to what life is revealing. Eclipses can show where a pattern is ready to change, but the interpretation should still be grounded in the whole chart.
What To Notice In Real Life
Eclipse seasons are worth tracking because they often bring attention to places where something has become unstable, overcharged, hidden, or ready to change. You may notice stronger dreams, strange timing, old patterns coming up, relationship shifts, or a sense that life is rearranging something before you fully understand why. The goal is not to predict every detail. The goal is to slow down, observe what is being revealed, and let the chart show which life area is being activated.