The Three Networks of Kendras
Most students of astrology are taught that there are only
four Kendras—the 1st, 4th, 7th, and 10th houses. While this is true in the
conventional sense, a deeper examination reveals that the horoscope contains
three interconnected sets of four houses. This broader perspective helps us
understand the cyclical nature of life and the evolution of the soul.
According to Mantreśvara, the Kendras are interconnected and
should not be viewed in isolation. Each house derives strength and meaning
through its relationship with the others. If we extend this principle further,
the horoscope appears to contain three networks, each representing a distinct
dimension of human existence.
The First Network: 1st, 4th, 7th, and 10th Houses
This is the principal Kendra group and represents the major
stages of worldly life.
- 1st
House (Lagna): The point where the soul enters earthly existence. It
signifies birth, the physical body, individuality, health, and the
beginning of life's journey.
- 4th
House: Represents the mother's womb, early nurturing, home, emotional
foundations, education, and inner contentment. It reflects the environment
that shapes the individual during the formative years.
- 7th
House: Marks the stage where the individual enters society as an equal
through marriage, partnerships, and meaningful relationships. It is also
the house of procreation, through which another soul enters the cycle of
birth.
- 10th
House: The highest point of the horoscope, often compared to the
zenith or the sky (Shikhar). It represents karma in
action—profession, responsibilities, achievements, authority, recognition,
and one's contribution to society.
Together, these four houses portray the outward journey of
life—from birth, upbringing, family formation, and finally the fulfilment of
one's worldly duties through action and achievement.
The Second Network: 2nd, 5th, 8th, and 11th Houses
The second network deals with continuity, transformation,
and the preservation of life.
- 2nd
House: Family, accumulated wealth, speech, food, and the resources
that sustain life.
- 5th
House: Intelligence, children, creativity, learning, and purva
punya (merits from previous births). It represents the continuation of
lineage, both biological and intellectual.
- 8th
House: Transformation, longevity, hidden forces, inheritance, crises,
and the mysteries of birth and death. It signifies the profound changes
that shape human evolution.
- 11th
House: Gains, fulfilment of desires, social circles, achievements, and
ultimately the completion of worldly aspirations. Philosophically, it also
represents the soul approaching the end of its present earthly journey
before moving onward.
These four houses illustrate how life is sustained,
transformed, and eventually completed. They govern accumulation, inheritance,
continuity, fulfilment, and the deeper processes of change.
The Third Network: 3rd, 6th, 9th, and 12th Houses
The third network represents effort, struggle, destiny, and
liberation.
- 3rd
House: Courage, initiative, communication, skills, self-effort, and
the determination required to shape one's destiny.
- 6th
House: Service, discipline, competition, illness, debts, enemies, and
the obstacles that compel growth and refinement.
- 9th
House: Dharma, fortune, higher learning, teachers, ethics, blessings,
and spiritual guidance. It represents the principles that elevate human
life beyond mere survival.
- 12th
House: Loss, renunciation, expenditure, isolation, spiritual realization,
and final liberation. It signifies the dissolution of worldly attachments
and the soul's preparation for its next state of existence.
This group reflects the inner evolution of the
individual—from effort, through struggle and grace, to ultimate release.
Understanding the Horoscope as Three Interconnected
Cycles
Rather than viewing the twelve houses as isolated
compartments, they can be understood as three interrelated cycles of four
houses each.
- 1–4–7–10
describe the framework of worldly existence and karma.
- 2–5–8–11
explain continuity, sustenance, transformation, and fulfilment.
- 3–6–9–12
reveal the journey of effort, destiny, spiritual growth, and liberation.
Each network has its own rhythm and purpose, yet all three
operate simultaneously. Together they describe the complete journey of the
individual—from birth to achievement, from sustenance to transformation, and
from effort to eventual liberation.
Seen in this light, the horoscope is not merely a collection
of twelve independent houses but a beautifully integrated structure, where
every group of four houses represents a distinct yet interconnected dimension
of life. Understanding these three networks enables the astrologer to
appreciate the chart as a living, dynamic whole rather than a set of
disconnected significations.
This presentation remains faithful to classical house
meanings while developing your philosophical interpretation of the three
four-house networks. It also avoids asserting as established doctrine the idea
that the 11th house signifies the soul's exit, instead presenting it as part of
a broader philosophical framework.