Dashas
Dashas
Dashas
by Rohini Ranjan
The body of jyotish depends squarely on the epic texts known as Brihat
Parasara Hora Sastra (BPHS) which are essentially a comprehensive
transcript of the dialogues between Muni Parashara and his acolyte
Maitryaya. In 100 chapters, Parashara has captured nearly all of what
traditional Jyotish is. There have been embellishments and additions and
in some cases subtractions and variant opinions that have been provided
by other doyens and even a significant portion of Parasharas teachings
have been attributed to what is known as Jaimini System. Jaimini system
builds upon and elaborates a portion of the discourse. Without entering the
quagmire of who came first and who adopted whose writings and similar
never-ending controversies, most jyotishis would serve themselves better
by avoiding getting embroiled into such debates and gratefully gain what
they can from the writings of all of these great former astrologers; many
of them being saints.
One or Many
If one were to browse through BPHS one would see a few categories.
There are dashas which are calculated based on the nakshatra such as
Vimshottari, others are based on the rashis such as Chara dasha, while
another popular dasha Kalachakra incorporates both the nakshatra and
rashi. Aside from this classification, Parashara has indicated that some of
the dashas can be utilized as general purpose and applicable to all,
whereas other dashas are utilized when certain conditions are met with in
a horoscope. For example, Panchottari dasa is utilized when someone is
born in karka lagna and also has karka dwadashamsha rising in lagna.
Udu Dasha
Udu means the flying as in a bird. The term is also utilized for
nakshatras. Puristically, all nakshatra dashas are udu dashas, however,
generally speaking vimshottari dasha is considered as the udu dasha.
Vimshottari has been the primary staple dasa used by jyotishis in general.
A minority of jyotishis have utilized other dasas too quite successfully and
in recent times, Professor B. V. Raman, Mr. K.N. Rao, and more
prolifically Sri Sanjay Rath and his disciples have been very instrumental
in producing large bodies of work dealing with different dashas. In the
case of many of the dashas, there are variant calculations prescribed and
this then compounds with the other two uncertainties: which ayanamsha,
which dasha year duration and the situation becomes very complex. In
astrology there is a major role played by what is known as the Law of
Diminishing Returns. I have seen beginners and even more advanced
jyotishis to use too many factors and techniques which make it very
confusing for most. The illustrated cases are very impressive but when the
same dasha or principles are applied to a few more randomly selected
charts, the solid platform risks becoming a floating barge in the Jyotish
Baitarini!
Kiss
This stands for the ancient multicultural principle of Keep It Simple
Santon! Since these articles are aimed at beginners, it would be more
useful to learn a few dashas rather than a whole bag-full that would only
cause mental indigestion. I have found two dashas, both belonging to the
udu dasa group most useful. When the birth is in suklapaksha (bright half
of moon, shukla prathama to poornima) vimshottari dasa must be used
whereas if the birth is in krishnapaksha (Krishna prathama to amavasya)
then ashtottari must be used. This is not to say that dashas such as chara,
sthira, yogini, chakra, kalachakra and the rest of 32 dashas described in
BPHS are to be ignored. But these must be taken up after gaining some
confidence in vimshottari and astottari. Also, one must not rely on just
articles in magazines or on the internet to consider themselves astrology
literate. Internet articles in particular can be of the highest quality or
questionable, therefore some prudent caution would not be out of place.
Fundamental Basis
The basic premise behind dashas is simple and straightforward. Life is
segmented into sections or periods which are represented by planets in the
horoscope (nakshatra dashas) or the signs (rashi dasas). The orientation
point for the nakshatra dashas (udu) is the natal moon. If we visualize that
starting at moment of birth, the moon is progressing through the rest of the
zodiac (at a speed lot slower than in transit, i.e., 2.5 days per sign) and as
it passes through the different nakshatra, the planetary rulership changes.
The planetary ruler is then considered to be the primary planet indicator
during that period. Some of the dashas such as vimshottari and ashtottari
have very long total duration, 120 and 108 years respectively and most
individuals do not complete the full cycle. Others dashas such as yogini
are shorter and one can have more than one cycle during a typical lifetime.
Is Vimshottari a Progression?
Those who are familiar with western astrology would perhaps know that
in that system the primary progression is based on a degree a year
progression. Planets are considered as moving one degree ahead each
year, thereby completing 120 degrees in 120 years. If you think for a
moment, vimshottari is based on the moon moving through a set of
nakshatras (120 degrees) in 120 years! However, in the finer Jyotish
system of dasha, it is the moon that we consider as progressing at unequal
rates through the zodiac. For example if at birth moon was at the
beginning of Ketus nakshatra, the nativity will experience 7 years of ketu
followed by 20 years of Venus dasha (moon is moving through Venus
star). So although in longitude (degrees) the star of Ketu occupies the
same segment in the zodiac (13d 20m or 800 minutes) as does the star
ruled by Venus, the moon moves through the two at very different speeds,
thus giving the different durations of the dashas. The following table will
help clarify:
Next time we shall look at tara sambandhas and other factors influencing
the planets that one would be examining while analyzing a vimshottari
dasha. Only through an examination of a matrix of influences can one
truly decipher the meaning of the astrosymbolizm of dashas and how they
connect and work cooperatively with transits within the confines of the
horoscope of the nativity.
After dasas have been calculated using tables that are given in all
ephemeris or with a program (since most people use computers these
days), the next question that faces the astrologer is, how to translate all
these periods and planets into a reading? Some basic considerations that
may be followed are:
Strength Prevails
The strength of the dasha and bhukti lords determine the extent to which
the effects of these planets would materialize or be experienced by the
nativity (jatak, one that is born).
Nature of Indicators
During a dasha (and to a lesser extent in a bhukti), influences of the
planet/s are expressed according to the nature of the sign in which the
planet is placed in the natal chart. Planets in cardinal (chara) signs
generate restlessness, activity, outwardly directed expression, dynamism,
the opposite effects are seen during periods of planets in fixed (sthira)
signs. Mutable (dwiswabhav) signs generate ambiguity, bipolar responses
and nervousness. The quadruplicity of the sign (all sidereal) must likewise
be taken into account, particularly the way in which it interacts with the
inherent nature of the planet. A fiery Mars in a fiery cardinal sign can
express itself strongly and is very much in its own element. If it is not in a
malefic house (6th, 8th or 12th from ascendant) or aspected by malefic
planets, its periods signify a large amount of activity and personal growth
and reshaping. Likewise, Moon in a watery sign would be able to express
its effects more in the way it is supposed to. Moon in a fixed fiery sign
would be very uncomfortable. This, incidentally, is perhaps the theme on
which house ownerships, exaltation and debilitation are based.