Indian history speaks about a famous mathematician
and astrologer named Bhaskaracharya (1114-1185). He is often referred to as the
greatest mathematician of medieval India. He is known for his treatises on
Trigonometry, arithmetic, Algebra, mathematics of the planets, etc. Bhaskara's
work on calculus, it is proven, predates Newton and Leibniz by half a
millennium.
Maybe getting into a marriage, with the mindset of
ensuring it works out fine-with both parties making it work-is what is
important.
Now Bhaskara had a daughter named Lilavathi. As
Bhaskara was a renowned astrologer, he studied Lilavathi’s horoscope himself
and was aghast at finding out that she was destined to remain childless and
unmarried- if she did marry, the marriage would not last. Hence, after a series
of complex calculations, he came up with a time which countered this
prediction- if the marriage was performed within the span of the calculated
minutes, she would be blessed with a long and prosperous married life. So for
the same, he made an elaborate sand clock, and told his daughter that she had
to stand watch by it- when the sand reached a certain level, her beau had to
tie the mangal sutra around her neck. The family waited and waited for the sand
to reach the said level before dawn, but it never did. Indian marriages are
usually conducted at day break, and when the sun rose, everybody knew something
was wrong. On inspection it was found that a pearl from Lilavathi’s nose ring
had fallen into the sand clock and had clogged the opening. The auspicious
moment had passed..and Lilavathi remained unmarried all her life, devoting
herself to mathematics and sciences.
Astrology, to those who follow it and practice it,
is a science. Atleast in India. Any auspicious event is conducted taking into
account the horoscopes of the parties involved. But the one occasion where astrology
plays its most prominent and vital role is weddings. No Hindu wedding is
conducted without proper analysis and matching of the horoscopes of the bride
and the groom. Being in the middle of this drama, I was reading up on these. Here
is what I found.
Any individual’s horoscope is drawn based on the
day, date, place and time of his birth. The place and time play a vital role
because the sun’s rays falling on the earth- after traversing and touching many
planets- plays the most important role in shaping the person’s future. So the
planetary positions at the time of your birth determine your birth star and
your ruling planet, and when your ruling planet is ‘friends’ with the bigger
planets (like, say, Saturn, for instance) that shape people’s destiny, you are
in luck.
Now when you are getting married, one looks for 10
matchings between your horoscope and your probable-partner’s:
- Dinam- Ensures the husband and wife experience a healthy life with all comforts
- Ganam- Ensures a compatible sex life
- Yoni- Ensures mutual love between the couple
- Rasi- For continuation of lineage/children
- Rasiatipathy- Ensures similarity in thought processes
- Rajju- For longetivity of married life (life of the partners)
- Vedha- Wards off affliction- ensures a healthy married life
- Vasya- For attraction between the couples
- Mhendhram- Wellbeing of children-birth of intelligent, healthy kids
- Sthree Dheergam- Ensures that the husband can keep the wife happy
Somehow,
each of these, I see, takes a dig at common problems that couples face today.
Anyway, they say that 8 out of these 10 will suffice to make a good marriage.
The irony is, some marriages fail despite matching
horoscopes. The answer to this is that the birth time might not have been
recorded accurately. The birth time, I gather from our astrologer, is the time
at which the baby cries its first cry.
Irony number 2 is what my friend Jen knocked into
my head. Nobody other than us Hindus look at horoscopes. And it is not like the
rest of the world is having a bad time out there!
Ah. Maybe ignorance IS bliss. How does one get into a marriage knowing it would not work?
Maybe it is ok to hand over the reins to fate and
sit back and watch the show unfold.
All the answers ARE probably there- but maybe,
just maybe, we better put our faith in God, rather than men.
15 comments:
I guess one should trust oneself and the other person and also trust the institution and then sit back. Everything in life is like that, I reckon.
Seems to me that you are thinking too much these days about job, marriage, life, etc.
Relax, G. Everything will happen for good.
Joy always,
Susan
Lovely post along with sporadic information about Math! My marriage(may be I have said this more than once) was love-arranged, so there was NO need for matching of horoscopes as the bride/groom was fixed. But our iyer was super inquisitive, he still went ahead with checking our 'poruthams' without informing us... we came to know about this only when he told - Nalla porutham 8/10 mhwhaha! :D
SO, yeah... like Rowan Atkinson married Sunetra Shastry after a peek at the horoscopes! or the Royal Britain wedding was on the 'muhurtha' naal!! :O
Do stop by my blog!! I'd love your visits & comments!
We have to grin and bear it macha.. We don't have an option :-| Trust me, no two astrologers ever agree. SO go with the flow, have some faith in the system and when you see that sense of confidence in the other person., take that plunge.
Stop all this research and get married first...horoscopes be damned...i could tell you a lot of inside stories about this horoscope/time of birth thing...but then again i cannot leak company secrets....
Now i can claim that i do know the inspiration behind this article!!!
Chill babe!! All will be fine soon!!
@ Susan- I am Susan..thinking wayy too much! Yes, you are right about that..got to take a chill pill :) Thank you though! Big hug* :)
@ Kappu- Sporadic it was..very disengaged line of thought :(So cool about your wedding, Kappu! Good for you :D And yes, I do stop by your blog every time I see your post ;) I am making myself a promise to comment more :) Thanks for stopping by mine! :)
@ Sandy baby- I know dude :p Now is my time, after all those conversations we had through your 'times' ;) Faith it is, yeah :)
@ Doc- Hehahaha, after the conversation we had today, got more than enough company secrets. You get your UK visa, I'll get one to go to the Amazon \m/ ;)
Ni- yes yes maam, every post has an inspiration :) I am waiting to see your blog get functional now-THEN i can come and comment :p An eye for an eye :P :P
Hmmm.... are we getting a wedding invitation soon ?
Kya baat hai :)!
Cheers,
Mahesh
Pls make a note of this Gita in your mind, diary, iCalendar or where ever - HOROSCOPES ARE A COMPLETE BULLSHIT.
Even bullshit is used for some useful purposes!!!!
No offence to your writing but my offence is for such superstitious practices. I loved the way you have put up things. But don't talk to me about horoscopes!! hehe...!! :)
@ Mahesh- Wedding invite? What wedding? :o No wedding :P
@ Kalyan- Hahaa :P yes ok Sir ;)
Ohh thank you so much for this post. When my too be inlaws asked for my horoscope, I was wondering why all this. I did not think this was all necessary for a love marriage, but just to keep them happy I agreed. Turns out we have a 10 on 10 matching :D. Its not that we would not have got married if it would not have matched.
Now I know what each thing in a horoscope means. Thanks :)
good one Gitanjali
@ Soumya- 10 on 10?!!! WOW :D
Ok now the heavens also give their blessings :D wait no longer!
@ Ashish- hey, Thanks Ashish :)
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