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vedic astrology , NAWAB RAHUL

<cool_extacy wrote:

>

> OM NAMO NARAYANAY !!!!!!!!!

>

> Hi,

>

> I would like to request Senior Astrologers and Guru Ji's to

throw light on the topic of Shadbala of Various planets.

>

> If someone can go thru the chart of following native

>

> Date of Birth: 22nd February, 1981

> Time of Birth : 16:45

> Place of birth: Jhansi (UP) India

>

> The Shadbala's of Various Planets in the native's chart (In

Rupas) are

>

> Juipiter 12.10

> Mercury 11.23

> Saturn 11.00

> Venus 10.04

> Sun 7.60

> Moon 5.63

> Mars 4.99

>

> Apparently the native is going to enter Juipiter Mahadasha on

28th July 2008 (Juipiter has maximum Shadbala in his chart 12.10

Rupas and Retrograde in direction). Following which he will enter

Saturn's Mahadasha on 28th July, 2024 (Staurn has third maximum

Shadbala in his chart 11.00 Rupas and also is Retrograde in

direction) and Finally he will enter Mercury's Mahadasha on 28th

July, 2043 (Mercury has second maximum Shadbala in his chart 11.23

Rupas and is also Retrograde in direction).

>

> Now as we see that the Shadbala of all three Planets whose

Mahadasha the native is going to run in to now is considerable good

and all three of them are Retrograde in direction, Can senior

astrologers please guide me as to what results the native will get

owing to these attributes?

>

> Thanks And Regards,

> Rahul Trivedi

>

>

>

>

>

>

> It's here! Your new message!

> Get new email alerts with the free Toolbar.

>

>

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Anyone please throw light on significance of shadbala as asked by myself below

 

NAWAB RAHUL <cool_extacy wrote: OM NAMO NARAYANAY !!!!!!!!!

 

Hi,

 

I would like to request Senior Astrologers and Guru Ji's to throw light on the

topic of Shadbala of Various planets.

 

If someone can go thru the chart of following native

 

Date of Birth: 22nd February, 1981

Time of Birth : 16:45

Place of birth: Jhansi (UP) India

 

The Shadbala's of Various Planets in the native's chart (In Rupas) are

 

Juipiter 12.10

Mercury 11.23

Saturn 11.00

Venus 10.04

Sun 7.60

Moon 5.63

Mars 4.99

 

Apparently the native is going to enter Juipiter Mahadasha on 28th July 2008

(Juipiter has maximum Shadbala in his chart 12.10 Rupas and Retrograde in

direction). Following which he will enter Saturn's Mahadasha on 28th July, 2024

(Staurn has third maximum Shadbala in his chart 11.00 Rupas and also is

Retrograde in direction) and Finally he will enter Mercury's Mahadasha on 28th

July, 2043 (Mercury has second maximum Shadbala in his chart 11.23 Rupas and is

also Retrograde in direction).

 

Now as we see that the Shadbala of all three Planets whose Mahadasha the native

is going to run in to now is considerable good and all three of them are

Retrograde in direction, Can senior astrologers please guide me as to what

results the native will get owing to these attributes?

 

Thanks And Regards,

Rahul Trivedi

 

 

 

 

 

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Namaste.

 

About Shadbala of Planets there 576 messages in the archives,you may go through

message 15900 and read the recommended books there at.

 

NAWAB RAHUL <cool_extacy wrote:

Anyone please throw light on significance of shadbala as asked by myself below

 

NAWAB RAHUL <cool_extacy wrote: OM NAMO NARAYANAY !!!!!!!!!

 

Hi,

 

I would like to request Senior Astrologers and Guru Ji's to throw light on the

topic of Shadbala of Various planets.

 

If someone can go thru the chart of following native

 

Date of Birth: 22nd February, 1981

Time of Birth : 16:45

Place of birth: Jhansi (UP) India

 

The Shadbala's of Various Planets in the native's chart (In Rupas) are

 

Juipiter 12.10

Mercury 11.23

Saturn 11.00

Venus 10.04

Sun 7.60

Moon 5.63

Mars 4.99

 

Apparently the native is going to enter Juipiter Mahadasha on 28th July 2008

(Juipiter has maximum Shadbala in his chart 12.10 Rupas and Retrograde in

direction). Following which he will enter Saturn's Mahadasha on 28th July, 2024

(Staurn has third maximum Shadbala in his chart 11.00 Rupas and also is

Retrograde in direction) and Finally he will enter Mercury's Mahadasha on 28th

July, 2043 (Mercury has second maximum Shadbala in his chart 11.23 Rupas and is

also Retrograde in direction).

 

Now as we see that the Shadbala of all three Planets whose Mahadasha the native

is going to run in to now is considerable good and all three of them are

Retrograde in direction, Can senior astrologers please guide me as to what

results the native will get owing to these attributes?

 

Thanks And Regards,

Rahul Trivedi

 

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OM NAMO NARAYANAY.....

 

I found the material on the message archives very useful...thank u for guiding

me to the appropriate discussion...

 

Thank You

 

NAWAB RAHUL <cool_extacy wrote:

Anyone please throw light on significance of shadbala as asked by

myself below

 

NAWAB RAHUL <cool_extacy wrote: OM NAMO NARAYANAY !!!!!!!!!

 

Hi,

 

I would like to request Senior Astrologers and Guru Ji's to throw light on the

topic of Shadbala of Various planets.

 

If someone can go thru the chart of following native

 

Date of Birth: 22nd February, 1981

Time of Birth : 16:45

Place of birth: Jhansi (UP) India

 

The Shadbala's of Various Planets in the native's chart (In Rupas) are

 

Juipiter 12.10

Mercury 11.23

Saturn 11.00

Venus 10.04

Sun 7.60

Moon 5.63

Mars 4.99

 

Apparently the native is going to enter Juipiter Mahadasha on 28th July 2008

(Juipiter has maximum Shadbala in his chart 12.10 Rupas and Retrograde in

direction). Following which he will enter Saturn's Mahadasha on 28th July, 2024

(Staurn has third maximum Shadbala in his chart 11.00 Rupas and also is

Retrograde in direction) and Finally he will enter Mercury's Mahadasha on 28th

July, 2043 (Mercury has second maximum Shadbala in his chart 11.23 Rupas and is

also Retrograde in direction).

 

Now as we see that the Shadbala of all three Planets whose Mahadasha the native

is going to run in to now is considerable good and all three of them are

Retrograde in direction, Can senior astrologers please guide me as to what

results the native will get owing to these attributes?

 

Thanks And Regards,

Rahul Trivedi

 

 

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u can go thro the text given below.

good luck,

k.gopu

 

September 23rd, 2006

Shadbala

As an exercise in enhancing the capabilities of the

online kundali software, I would be adding another

column in planetary positions table - the one that

indicates the strength of each of the planets. Before

beginning to code the shadbala calculation part, I

thought I should share my notes about shadbala with

the readers of this blog.

 

Shadbala refers to strength of a planet in the

horoscope; calculating the strength (bala) is a six

(shaT) part calculation, hence the name shadbala.

Vedic Astrology has this unique way of determining if

a planet in the chart is strong enough to make an

impact. The six part calculation completely takes the

guess work away from process. The unit of strength is

rupa further divided into virupa, with 60 virupas = 1

rupa.

 

The six sources of strength to a planet are:

 

1. Sthan Bal: Strength based on position (sthan) of

the planet in the chart.

2. Dig Bal: Based on the direction (disha) the planet

in the chart.

3. Kaal Bal: The strength is determined based on time

(kaal) e.g. day/night, year (varsh), month (maas), day

(din) and hora (hour)

4. Cheshta Bal: In Sanskrit, cheshta means “to

tryâ€. Based on the velocity of planets around the

Sun, they are assigned cheshta bala. Retrogression

(vakri) is one of the types of the movement - since it

seems like negative velocity.

5. Naisargik Bal: Strength based on the planet. Sun is

considered strongest and Saturn the naturally weakest

planet in a chart. This strength remains the same for

all planets in every chart.

6. Drishti Bal: A planet, when being aspected by

another planet gains this strength.

 

This is just the outline of the post on Shadbala.

Since Shadbala is a big topic, it will take me some

time to both code it and complete this post. In the

coming days, I will keep writing more and when all

information is filled in, I will remove this

paragraph.

 

 

 

 

 

SHADBALA

In Vedic astrology there are methods which especially

in this age of

computers can give a quick insight in the state of

planets and

houses. One such method is treated here. This is the

method of

Shadbala. It gives a value to each planet. The more

points a planet

gets in Shadbala the stronger it is.

It is important to have some insight in how the

Shadbala value is

calculated. Only if you know the method followed by

this system of

calculation you can have an opinion about the value of

it.

When you started the first course you were given a

printout of your

chart. In this printout you see an overview of the

Shadbala

calculations. Now I will explain these. There are

slight variances

on how Shadbala is calculated. In this course I will

follow the

method of the late B.V. Raman as explained in his book

`graha and

bhava balas'. If you use Haydn's Jyotish and you want

to follow B.V.

Raman's method go to the options menu and select

`B.V.Raman' under

Shadbala style.

It is possible that other astrologers in the future

will develop

their own version of Shadbala. Personally I welcome

new and

innovative approaches. However, before we can develop

something new

we should exactly know how the traditional system

works. I would

suggest you have the printout of the Shadbala

calculation of your

personal chart in front of you while I explain the

calculations.

This makes it much easier to follow the explanations.

1. STHANA BALA

We start with calculating the sthana bala of a planet.

This is the

positional strength of a planet. Sthana Bala consists

of five

components:

1. The first one is called Ocha Bala. In the first

course you

learned that in Vedic Astrology all planets have exact

degrees of

exaltation. Like the Moon is exalted at 3 degrees

Taurus. When a

planet occupies it exact degree of exaltation the

planet gets 60

Shashtiamsas (Shashtiamsas are points). When it

occupies the

opposite point, its exact point of fall, it does not

get any

Shashtiamsas. Of course most of the time a planet will

occupy a

position somewhere in between these points. In that

case the points

that it will get will be calculated according to its

position from

the point of exaltation and fall. Example: The Moon at

3 degrees

Scorpio will get 0 Shashtiamsas. The Moon at 3 degrees

Leo will get

30 Shashtiamsas (this is exactly between 3 degrees

Scorpio and 3

degrees Taurus).

2. The second one is called Saptavargaja Bala. To

calculate

this we will have to look at the following seven

harmonic charts:

Rasi, Hora, Drekkana, Saptamsa, Navamsa, Dwadasamsa

and Trimsamsa.

In all these charts we look at what kind of sign a

certain planet is

located. If a planet occupies in the rashichart its

Moolatrikona

sign it gets 45 Shashtiamsas (this is a special rule

for the rashi

chart only), if it is in its own sign (of whatever

varga) it gets 30

Shashtiamsas, in the sign of a great friend 22.5

Shashtiamsas, in

the sign of a friend 15 Shashtiamsas, in a neutral

sign 7.5

Shashtiamsas, in the sign of an enemy 3.75

Shashtiamsas and in the

sign of a great enemy 1.875 Shashtiamsas. The concept

of friends and

enemies has been explained in the first course. This

is one of the

most important parts of Shadbala because Saptavargaja

bala can give

a lot of Shashtiamsas.

3. Ojayyugma Bala The idea behind this concept is that

a planet

gains strength because it is in an even or uneven sign

or navamsa.

The Moon and Venus get 15 Shashtiamsas when they are

in an even

sign. These planets also get 15 Shastiamsas when they

are in an even

navamsa. In totality the Moon or Venus may gain 30

Shashtiamsas if

they are located in an even sign AND even navamsa. The

reason behind

this is that the Moon and Venus are female planets and

are strong

when they are in female (even) signs or navamsas. Sun,

Mars,

Jupiter, Mercury and Saturn get 15 Shastiamsas when

they are in an

uneven sign. They also can get 15 Shashtiamsas when

they are in an

uneven navamsa. These planets are male or neutral and

are strong in

male (uneven) signs.

4. Kendra Bala A planet in a kendra house (1,4,7 and

10) gets

60 Shashtiamsas, a planet in the house 2,5,8 or 11

gets 30

Shashtiamsas, a planet in the house 3,6,9 or 12 gets

15

Shashtiamsas. The reasoning is that planets in

kendrahouses can

easily express themselves and are therefore strong.

5. Drekkena Bala To calculate this the planets are

divided into

masculine planets (Sun, Jupiter and Mars), neutral

planets (Saturn

and Mercury) and female planets (Venus and the Moon).

If a male

planet is in the first drekkana (0-10 degrees) of

whatever sign it

gets 15 Shashtiamsas. If a neutral planet is in the

middle drekkana

of whatever sign (that means it is located between

10-20 degrees of

whatever sign) it gets 15 Shashtiamsas. If a female

planet is

located in the last drekkana (the last 10 degrees) of

whatever sign

it gets 15 Shashtiamsas. The reasoning is that the

first drekkana of

each sign is good for male planets, the middle

drekkana for neutral

planets and the last drekkana for female planets.

Now we have to add up all the Shashtiamsa values. The

result is the

total Sthana Bala. You are in the priviliged position

that you do

not have to calculate all this by hand. You can see it

on the

computer printout. When you know what the different

strengths and

weaknesses mean you can easily assess the strengths

and weaknesses

of your chart just by looking at the Shadbala

printout.

2. DIG BALA

This principle has similarities with the principle of

Ocha Bala.

Only now the decisive factor is not the location of

the planet in a

certain sign, but in a certain house.

Each planet is powerful when it is located in a

certain direction.

Dig Bala means directional strength. The Sun and Mars

are powerful

in the South. These are planets which function

especially well in

the tenth house (the tenth house is the Southern part

of the sky).

Saturn is given maximum Dig Bala when it is in the

West, the seventh

house. Moon and Venus get maximum Dig Bala when the

are in the North

(fourth house). Mercury and Jupiter function well in

the first house

(the East).

A reason for this is that the morning is a great time

for studying

and learning. That is why Mercury and Jupiter, planets

which have to

do with studying and learning, are strong during that

time of day

(at that time the Sun is near the ascendant).

The Sun and Mars are energetic planets which need the

energy that is

available around noon (at that time the Sun is in the

tenth house).

Saturn is the planet of shades, which are at its

maximum during the

evening (when the Sun is opposite the ascendant).

Moon and Venus are soft planets which function good

during the time

that is meaned for sleeping and making love (at

midnight the Sun is

in the fourth house).

A planet gets maximum Dig Bala when it is in middle of

the bhava

(house) where it functions especially well. If for

example the Moon

is located right in the middle of the fourth house he

gets maximum

Dig Bala and is given 60 Shashtiamsas. If the Moon is

in the middle

of the tenth house it is given 0 Shashtiamsas.

A slight complication is that for determining this BV

Raman works

with the bhava chart and not with the rashi chart. The

midpoint of

the houses in the bhava chart may differ from the

midpoint of the

houses in the rashi chart (which is always 15 degrees

of a certain

sign).

The Bhava Chart is a chart which has unequal houses.

It is

comparable to the way we work with houses in Western

Astrology (and

in particular the Porphyry house system). The Bhava

Chart is

explained later.

Dig bala gives a good indication for how strong a

planet is in its

house.

3. KALA BALA

This has to do with the strength which a planet has

because of the

time of the day. It is strength of time.

It consists of different factors:

1. Divaratri Bala According to this system the Moon,

Saturn and

Mars are powerful during midnight. At noon they are

powerless. These

are the natural malefics + the Moon. The Sun, Jupiter

and Venus are

powerful during noon and are powerless during

midnight. These are

the natural benefics + the Sun. Adaptable Mercury is

considered to

be always powerful. This means that in every chart

Mercury gets the

maximum of 60 Shashtiamsas which can be gained by this

factor. The

Moon, Saturn and Mars are given 60 Shashtiamsas only

if the person

is born at midnight and 0 if the person is born at

noon. Sun,

Jupiter and Venus get 60 Shastiamsas if the person is

born at noon

and zero if he is born at midnight. Of course if the

person is born

at a time somewhere in between the value is

interpolated.

2. Paksha Bala A Paksha is equal to 15 lunar days.

When the

Moon is increasing it is Sukla Paksha. When the Moon

is decreasing

it is Krishna Paksha .The benefics are Jupiter, Venus,

Moon (from

the 8th day of the bright half of the lunar month to

the 8th day of

the dark half of the lunar month) and good influenced

Mercury. These

beneficial planets are powerful during Sukla Paksha.

The malefics

are Sun, Mars, Saturn, badly influenced Mercury and

the Moon (from

the 8th day of the dark half of the lunar month to the

8th day of

the bright half of the lunar month). They are powerful

during

Krishna Paksha. The benefics get more Shastiamsas if a

person is

born on Sukla Paksha and the malefics less. If a

person is born

during Krishna Paksha the malefics get more points.

The maximum

amount of Shashtiamsas to be gained is 60. The value

of the

Shastiamsas of the malefics + the value of the

Shastiamsas of the

benefics is always 60. The Shastiamsas of the Moon are

always

doubled.

3. Thribhaga Bala Sometimes in Shadbala you see things

which

look a bit curious. This is an example. The day (that

means the

period of daylight) is divided into three equal parts

and the night

(the period without daylight) is divided into three

equal parts. In

this system Jupiter is always given 60 Shastiamsas. In

addition, if

someone is born during the first part of the day

Mercury gets 60

Shashtiamsas. If someone is born during the second

part of the day

the Sun gets 60 Shashtiamsas. If born during the last

part of the

day Saturn gets 60 Shashtiamsas. If born during the

first part of

the night the Moon is given 60 Shashtiamsas. If born

during the

second part of the night Venus gets 60 Shashtiamsas.

If born during

the last part of the night Mars gets 60 Shashtiamsas.

I see some

connection between this system and the system of Dig

Bala. In the

reasoning behind Dig Bala the first part of the day is

seen as

particularly good for Mercurial activities. Noon is

seen as good for

activities which have to do with the Sun. Saturn is

strong when he

is opposite the ascendant (at the place of the evening

Sun). Also

the Moon and Venus are strong during nighttime.

However, the value

attached to the late night Mars is something which

cannot be found

in Dig Bala.

4. Abda Bala The planet which is the lord of the year

will get

15 Shahtiamsas. The lord of the year is the planet

which belongs to

the first day of the year. For example if the first

day of a certain

year is Sunday the year is ruled by the Sun, which

receives 15

Shashtiamsas according to this method. However,

because Mr. Raman

does not look at the calender but tries to find this

planet by

making a calculation (in which he uses the 360 day

year) it is very

well possible that the year began on another day then

is seen on the

Abda Bala printout.

5. Masa Bala The planet which is the lord of the first

day of

the month in which a person is born receives 30

Shashtiamsas. In

finding this planet more or less the same problems

appear as when

calculating Abda Bala. Mr. Raman uses a duration of

the month of 30

days.

6. Vara Bala The planet which rules the day at which

the person

is born receives 45 Shashtiamsas. This planet is found

without

calculations.

7. Hora Bala A day is divided into 24 hours or horas.

Each hora

is ruled by a planet. The first hora is ruled by the

planet which

rules the day. For example at Monday the first hora is

ruled by the

Moon. Then the order is according to the days of the

week (next hora

will be of Mars then of Mercury and so on). If you are

born at some

distance from the equator the horas are not of equal

length. The

period of daylight contains 12 horas and the period

without daylight

contains 12 horas. The ruler of the hora when you were

born gets 60

Shashtiamsas.

8. Ayana Bala This is a somewhat exotic concept in

Shadbala. To

really explain it would take a lot of space. The value

a planet gets

according to Ayana Bala has to do with the declination

it has from

the equator. If a planet has 0 declination the ayana

bala is 30. For

Venus, the Sun, Mars and Jupiter the Northern

declinations are added

to his value and the Southern declinations subtracted

(the

consequence of this is that a planet has a low ayana

bala if the

planet has a Southern declination and a high ayana

bala if the

planet has a Northern declination) . For Saturn and

the Moon it is

the other way around. For Mercury declinations are

always added. The

maximum amount of Shashtiamsas to be gained is 60. The

ayana bala of

the Sun is always doubled. I have not succeeded in

finding an

explanation why these rules are the way they are.

9. Yuddha Bala This concept has to do with planets

which are in

war. Therefore we only encounter Yuddha bala values if

there are

planets at war in the chart. First we have to

calculate the total

Sthana bala value + Dig Bala + Kala Bala till Hora

Bala of the two

fighting planets. Then we must calculate the

difference between

these two values. This difference must be divided by

the difference

between the diameters of the two planets as seen in

the sky. The

result of this calculation is the Yuddhabala. This

must be added to

the Kala Bala total of the winning planet and

subtracted to the Kala

Bala of the loosing planet. Maybe you experience this

to be a

difficult concept. You can also look at it simply from

the point of

view that a planet which wins a war gets some bonus

Shashtiamsas,

while the planet which looses the war looses some

Shashtiamsas.

After everything has been calculated we add it all up

and get the

total Kala Bala.

4. CHESTA BALA

Again we encounter a concept which is not easy to

explain without a

lengthy introduction about astronomy. I suggest we

take a shortcut.

Planets which are relatively slow (among them

retrograde planets)

get a high Chesta Bala value. Planets which are

relatively fast get

a low chesta bala value. The reasoning is that slow

moving planets

are able to focus their energy more because they stay

in one place.

The maximum amount of Shashtiamsas to be earned is 60.

I would like

to stress that it is the relative speed I am talking

about here:

relative to the average speed of a planet. Therefore

it is possible

that a relatively fast moving Saturn gets a low Chesta

Bala, while a

relatively slow moving Mercury gets a high Chesta

Bala. On the

computer outprint of Haydn's Jyotish you see the

average speed (at

the top of the printout). When you see a 1 behind a

planet it is

moving at its average speed. When you see a value

higher than 1 it

moves faster than its average speed, when you see a

value lower than

1 it moves slower.

The Sun and Moon do not get Chesta Bala values. They

move in a

fairly regular pattern and do not go retrograde ever.

5. NAISARGIKA BALA

Each planet gets a certain amount of Shashtiamsas

according to the

luminosity it has. Because the Sun is the brightest

planet it is

given 60 Shashtiamsas. Saturn is the faintest and gets

8.57

Shashtiamsas. This means that the amount of

Shashtiamsas a planet

receives according to Naisargika Bala is in every

chart the same.

6. DRIK BALA

Drik Bala is called aspect strength. If a planet is

aspected by

benefics the planet receives a positive Shashtiamsa

value. If a

planet is aspected by malefics than it gets negative

Drik Bala

points. See paragraph 3.2 for which planets are

considered benefics

and malefics.

The calculation of the Drik Bala value is a bit

complicated because

we also take partial aspects in account.

I will give one example of this. We know that the Sun,

Moon, Venus

and Mercury aspect the planet in the seventh sign from

it. Now for

this purpose we say that these planet aspect the

zodiacal degree in

opposition (180 degrees from it). The point which is

120 degrees

from these planets get a partial aspect of 50%, the

point which is

90 degrees from the planet gets a 75% aspect, the

point which is 60

degrees gets a 25% aspect and the point which is 30 or

150 degrees

from the planet gets no aspect at all.

Most Jyotishis only work with full (100%) aspects, but

for this

purpose we work with partial aspects (that means

aspects which are

weaker than full aspects). This makes the calculation

of Drik Bala

quite cumbersome. Thank God we have computers.

What is important to know is that if a certain planet

has a negative

Drig Bala value than it is mainly under the influence

of malefics

and if it has a positive Drig Bala value it is under

the influence

of benefics. Therefore I think the Drig Bala value is

very

interesting. By looking at the Shadbala printout we

can immediately

see if a planet is mainly under the influence of

benefics or

malefics and how strong this influence is.

7. TOTAL SHADBALA

Finally, the Shashtiamsas are added up. We get the

Shadbala value in

Shashtiamsas. Next they are divided by 60. Then we get

the Shadbala

values in Rupas. At the printout you can see the

Shadbala value in

Rupas.

It is important to realize that the influence of

certain Shadbala

factors is much greater than others. Simply because

the amount of

Shashtiamsas to be gained by certain Shadbala factors

is much

greater than by others. As an example: the amount of

Shashtiamsas

which can be gained by the factor Sthana Bala is a lot

more than

what can be gained by Dig Bala. Therefore the six

Shadbala factors

are not equally important.

Something else happens. According to the Shadbala

rules every planet

needs a certain amount of Rupas to be strong.

According to these

rules Mercury needs 7 Rupas, Jupiter needs 6 ½ Rupas,

The Moon needs

6 Rupas, Venus needs 5 ½ Rupas, Saturn, the Sun and

Mars need 5

Rupas. These values are seen as the minimum

requirement for a

certain planet to be strong. I have never seen an

explanation of why

this is so.

The total Shad Bala in Rupas is divided by this

minimum requirement

and then we get the Shad Bala ratio. The most

interesting about this

Shad Bala ratio is to see whether a planet has more or

less than the

minimum requirement and how much that is.

In general most astrologers attach more value to the

total Shad

Bala. Because I have some difficulties in seeing the

logic behind

the minimum requirements I also attach more value to

the total

Shadbala.

8. EXAMPLE: BILL CLINTON

As an example let us take a quick look at the Shadbala

printout of

Bill Clinton (chart is shown in the section about the

Nakshatras).

The strongest planet according to Shadbala is the Sun,

which has a

total Shadbala of 8.66. This is something to be

expected from a

person who is president of the USA. Next comes

Mercury, which is

also fairly strong and indeed he always seems to talk

his way out of

problems.

If we look at the planets which have a low Shadbala

value we see

Venus and especially Saturn. Indeed, a lot of his

problems have to

do with sexuality, lovemaking and financial deals

(Venus). It also

seems that he has a difficulty in keeping limits

(Saturn).

 

9. ISHTA PHALA AND KASHTA PHALA

On the printout you see some other factors mentioned.

It is good to

know what they mean.

The Ishta Phala value of a certain planet is

calculated as follows:

the Ocha Bala (see paragraph 1.1) is multiplied by the

Chesta Bala

(see paragraph 4). Then the square root of the product

is extracted.

We get a value between 0 and 60.

The Sun and the Moon do not have a Chesta Bala. Yet we

need to have

a Chesta Bala value for these planets otherwise we

cannot calculate

the Ishta Phala. To get a Chesta Bala value for the

Sun and Moon we

make the following calculation: we add 90 degrees to

the Sun's

longitude. If the value we get is more than 180

degrees it will be

subtracted from 360. The result is the Sun's Chesta

Bala value (at

least the Chesta Bala value for this purpose). This

value is divided

by three. Then we get the Chesta Bala value in

Shashtiamsas.

To calculate the Chesta Bala value of the Moon we make

another

calculation. The Sun's longitude is subtracted from

that of the

Moon. Again if the value we get is more than 180

degrees it will be

subtracted from 360. The result is the Moon's Chesta

Bala value for

this purpose. Again to get the value in Shastiamsas

the value is

divided by three.

I hope by this time you are not overwhelmed by

calculations.

Personally I feel Ishta Phala/Kashta Phala is perhaps

not one of the

most interesting points of Shadbala but you should

have some idea of

way it is calculated.

Anyway, we have to explain the Kashta Phala. We

calculate 60-Ocha

bala and 60-Chesta Bala. Next we calculate the product

of this and

then the square root of this product will be the

Kashta Phala value.

The idea is that if a planet has a higher Ishta Phala

than Kashta

Phala value it is inclined to do good in its dasa and

bhukti and if

it has a higher Kashta Phala than Ishta Phala value it

is inclined

to do evil in its dasa and bhukti. The logic of this

may be clear.

Of course it is good if a planet has a big Ocha Bala

and Chesta Bala

value. Then the value of Ishta Phala will also be

large and the

amount of Kashta Phala value will be small.

However, as the Shadbala system shows there are more

factors to be

considered how a planet performs. It may be wiser to

evaluate the

functioning of the planet in its dasa and bhukti by

looking at the

Total Shadbala value.

10. RESIDENTIAL STRENGTH

This is the last factor we have to consider. For this

we have to

calculate the Bhava Chakra (House Chart) which is

dealt with in

another tutorial.

The Bhava Chart is a Chart which works with unequal

houses which are

comparable to the housesystem of Porphyry.

The reasoning is that if a planet is close to the

midpoint of a

certain Bhava (house) it is given a high Residential

Strength and if

it is located at the edge of a Bhava (house) it gets a

low

Residential Strength. A planet with a high Residential

Strength is

powerful while a planet with a low Residential

Strength is weak.

Ishta/Kashta Phala values and Residential Strength are

values which

stand on their own and are not used to calculate the

total Shadbala.

11. CONCLUSION

It is my opinion that Shadbala is a useful and

interesting system.

All kinds of different strenghts are summarized in a

single figure.

We can look at the total strength of a planet and

analyze from which

factors this strength comes from.

However I consider some factors of Shadbala to be more

useful than

others. Factors which I consider to be especially

interesting are

Ocha Bala (1.1.), Saptavargaja Bala (1.2), Kendra Bala

(1.4), Dig

Bala (2), Chesta Bala (4), Drik Bala (6).

If I would be so bold as to redesign the system I

would skip some

factors (like Naisargika Bala, which is the same in

all charts and

probably Thribhaga Bala) and probably add one or two

new factors.

For example: there is no Shadbala factor which

considers whether a

planet is in a dushtana house (houses 6,8 or 12) or

not, while it is

generally known that this is important for a planet. I

would also

like to modernize the way factors like Abda Bala and

Masa Bala are

calculated. As far as Ishta/Kashta Phala and

Residential Strength is

concerned I would skip Ishta/Kashta Phala and

integrate Residential

Strength in the calculations of the Shadbala ratio.

Vedic Astrology is traditional. Of course this has its

advantages,

but we should always evaluate whether a system could

be improved.

Indeed I am aware of some astrologers (like Ranjan

Bose) who have

come up with other systems to measure the strength of

planets. These

other systems can also be found in Tajika Astrology

(which will be

dealt with later in this course). In that system of

Indian astrology

we find systems which have the same goal that Shadbala

has (to

measure the strength of planets) but are quite

different. Also there

are authors which have developed slight variances of

Shadbala.

However, the alternatives are not necessarily better.

Most systems

that can be an alternative to Shadbala are simpler,

therefore easier

to calculate, but also have characteristics, which can

be

criticized.

In fact, untill this day Shadbala is the most complete

and

sophisticated system to measure the strength of

planets and

therefore highly useful.

12. EXERCISE

1. Look at the Total Shadbala values of the planets in

your

chart. Put them in an order of strength. The weakest

planet first

and the strongest planet last and the others in

between. Are the

results surprising or do you recognize the results in

the way you

experience the planets.

2. Look at the Shadbala ratios and again put them in

order of

strength. Look especially at which planets have a

value bigger than

one and which planets have a value which is less than

one.

3. We are going to look at some particular interesting

factors

of the Shadbala factors. Look at the following

factors: ocha bala

(1.1.), Saptavargaja Bala (1.2), Kendra Bala (1.4),

Dig Bala (2),

Chesta Bala (4), Drik Bala (6). For each of these

factors look at

which planet has the strongest value and which planet

has the

weakest value. Do not do this exercise by `automatic

pilot', but

when you analyze a certain factor try to realize what

this factor

means.

4. Take a look a the total Kala Bala value (3) of the

planets.

Sometimes I wonder whether this factor does not weigh

to heavily in

the system as the amount of Shashtiamsas to be gained

by this factor

are sometimes very high indeed. Again make an overview

which planet

has the highest Kala Bala and which planet has the

least. Try to

realize that if the differences are extreme this may

have a big

influence on the endresult (the total Shadbala ratio).

 

5. Look also at the Residential Strength. Put the

planets in

order of Residential Strength (9). We will deal with

the Bhava Chart

later, but untill now you have to realize that planets

which have a

high Residential Strength can disperse their energy

better in the

houses then planets which do not have much Residential

Strength (it

is possible that planets are located in a different

house in the

Bhava Chart than in the Rashi, this will be explained

in a later ).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

______________________________\

____

Food fight? Enjoy some healthy debate

in the Answers Food & Drink Q & A.

http://answers./dir/?link=list & sid=396545367

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