चन्द्र महादशा Candra mahādaśā
| Duration | 10 years |
|---|---|
| Lord | चन्द्र Candra |
Themes of the period
Ten years lived at the tempo of the mind: home, mother and family matters, emotional needs, the public and popularity, travel over water (literal or metaphorical) — the inner life sets the agenda and the outer life follows it.
By condition of the lord
A bright, dignified Moon (waxing, Taurus/Cancer, benefic company) gives a flowing, well-loved decade: nurture received and given, public warmth, fertile beginnings. A stressed Moon makes emotional regulation the period's true career — routines, rest and honest company are not soft advice but the actual levers; charts consistently show this dasha rewarding whoever tends the mind like a garden.
Cited fromBPHS, Chs. 46–49Phaladeepika (daśā)Parāśari tradition
How to synthesize a sub-period: the mahadasha lord sets the chapter, the antardasha lord writes the current page, and the pratyantardasha lord the paragraph. The same logic applies at each level down.
Begin with each lord's natal condition — house, sign dignity, lordships from the lagna, conjunctions, aspects. A period can only deliver what the chart promises: the dasha is the calendar, the natal chart is the contract.
BPHS, Chs. 46–49Parāśari tradition
Blend the two lords' karakatvas and house agendas: Venus–Mercury foregrounds art plus commerce; Saturn–Moon, duty plus emotional life. The antardasha lord's themes surface within the arena the mahadasha lord governs natally.
BPHS, antardaśā chaptersParāśari tradition
Weigh the relation between period lord and sub-period lord: natural friendship, and their mutual house positions from each other. Lords in mutual kendra/trikona (or 3/11) cooperate; lords in mutual 6/8 or 2/12 (shashtashtaka/dwirdwadasha) create friction that reads as competing agendas — a negotiation phase, not a doom flag.
BPHS, antardaśā chaptersParāśari tradition
The sub-lord's dignity modulates the volume: an exalted antardasha lord within a modest mahadasha still delivers a bright passage; a debilitated one within a strong mahadasha asks for its cancellation conditions (neecha-bhanga) and extra patience — and often marks the period's best growth work.
Phaladeepika (daśā)Parāśari tradition
Concretely, a sub-period activates: the houses the sub-lord occupies and owns, the houses it aspects, and its karakatvas — filtered through the mahadasha lord's agenda. Listing these houses first keeps the interpretation disciplined and specific.
BPHS, antardaśā chaptersParāśari tradition
Dasha sandhi — the junction between two mahadashas — is traditionally a tender transition: the outgoing lord files its last papers while the incoming one sets up office. Read it as a handover season calling for patience and light scheduling, never as a danger window.
Parāśari tradition
Frame every period constructively: name the workload, the skill it builds, and its end date. Malefic-lord sub-periods are described through their honest work (discipline, courage, focus) with their supports named; Tarasetu never uses sub-periods to forecast death, disease, divorce or financial ruin.
Parāśari tradition
Sources
- BPHS, Chs. 46–49Brihat Parashara Hora Shastra (attrib. Maharshi Parashara), Chs. 46–49 (97-chapter recension, R. Santhanam ed.): the Vimshottari dasha as the foremost dasha system — sequence and years (Ketu 7, Venus 20, Sun 6, Moon 10, Mars 7, Rahu 18, Jupiter 16, Saturn 19, Mercury 17; total 120), effects of each graha's dasha, and antardasha doctrine. Sanskrit classic, public domain.
- Phaladeepika (daśā)Mantreswara, Phaladeepika, dasha chapters (Chs. 19–20 region of the 28-chapter text): dasha effects keyed to the lord's dignity — exalted/own-sign lords give their best results, debilitated or combust lords their weaker results. Synthesized in our own words.
- Parāśari traditionCommon Parashari timing doctrine — 'a dasha delivers what the chart promises, when it promises it' — shared across the classical corpus and traditional teaching, not attributable to a single shloka.