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Sunday, July 12, 2026

Bādhaka Planets According to Positional Relationship

 Bādhaka Planets According to Positional Relationship

Original Verse

ग्रहाणां स्थानवशेन परस्परबाधकत्वमाह ॥

क्रमाच्चरागाद्विशरीरभाजामुपान्त्यधर्मस्मरगास्तदीशाः ।

खरेशमांदिस्थितराशिनाथा अतीवबाधाकरखेचराः स्युः ॥२॥

 

Word-to-Word Meaning

ग्रहाणाम् — of the planets.

स्थान-वशेन — according to their positional placement; by virtue of the houses occupied.

परस्पर-बाधकत्वम् — mutual obstructive or adverse influence (Bādhakatva).

आह — is described.

क्रमात् — in sequence.

चर — movable signs.

द्वि-शरीर-भाजाम् — those possessing two bodies, i.e., dual signs.

(The reference to fixed signs is understood by implication, a common feature of compact Sanskrit composition.)

उपान्त्य — the penultimate; astrologically, the eleventh house.

धर्म — literally "Dharma"; conventionally denoting the ninth position.

स्मरग — the house of Kāma (Smara = Cupid), namely the seventh house.

तद्-ईशाः — the lords of those respective houses.

खरेश — the lord of the sign occupied by Rahu (according to the received commentary).

मांदि-स्थित-राशि-नाथाः — the lord of the sign occupied by Mandi (Gulika).

अतीव — exceedingly.

बाधाकारकाः — producers of obstruction and impediment.

खेचराः — planets.

स्युः — become.

 

Literal Translation

"The mutual obstructive (Bādhaka) planets are now described according to their positional relationship. In sequence, the lord of the eleventh for movable signs, the lord of the Dharma position for fixed signs, and the lord of the seventh for dual signs, together with the lords of the signs occupied by Rahu and Mandi, become exceedingly powerful agents of obstruction."

 

Interpretative Commentary

The traditional interpretation understands the verse as prescribing the following Bādhaka houses:

  • Movable Ascendants — 11th house.
  • Fixed Ascendants — 9th house.
  • Dual Ascendants — 7th house.

This interpretation has been accepted by most later authorities and has become the standard doctrine of Bādhaka-sthāna.

However, the expression धर्म in this verse deserves closer examination.

Conventionally, धर्म is taken to denote the ninth house from the ascendant. While grammatically permissible, this interpretation presents a significant conceptual difficulty. The ninth house is the foremost Dharma Trikona, representing fortune, righteousness, the preceptor, blessings, and divine grace. For several fixed ascendants, its lord is also a celebrated Yogakāraka, producing powerful benefic results. It is therefore difficult to reconcile the same house simultaneously functioning as the principal Bādhaka or obstructive house.

An alternative interpretation offers a more harmonious understanding.

The word धर्म need not necessarily refer to the ninth house from the ascendant. Rather, it may denote the Dharma position (the ninth) reckoned from the previously implied reference point in the sequence.

Viewed in this manner, an elegant cyclic pattern emerges.

  • The ninth (Dharma) from the 3rd house is the 11th.
  • The ninth (Dharma) from the 11th house is the 7th.
  • The ninth (Dharma) from the 7th house is the 3rd.

Thus, the sequence becomes:

3 → 11 → 7 → 3

Accordingly, the Bādhaka houses are understood as:

Ascendant Type

Bādhaka House

Movable

11th

Fixed

3rd

Dual

7th

The apparent reference to धर्म is therefore interpreted not as the ninth house from the ascendant, but as the ninth from the preceding member of the cyclic sequence. In the case of fixed ascendants, this means the ninth from the seventh house, which is the third house.

This interpretation restores a remarkable geometrical symmetry that is otherwise absent in the conventional reading.

 

Philosophical Significance

This interpretation possesses an additional philosophical strength.

The houses 3, 7, and 11 together constitute the Kāma Trikona—the trine of desire. These houses govern initiative, ambition, relationships, fulfilment of desires, aspirations, gains, and worldly interaction.

The 3rd house represents the birth of desire through self-effort, initiative, courage, competition, and personal will.

The 7th house externalizes desire through relationships, attraction, partnerships, and interaction with others.

The 11th house signifies the fulfilment, expansion, and multiplication of desires through gains, ambitions, and social accomplishment.

Thus, the entire cycle of human desire is represented by this trinal group.

From a philosophical perspective, this is precisely where obstacles naturally arise. Desire is the motivating force behind worldly activity, yet uncontrolled desire gives rise to attachment, rivalry, greed, frustration, and vice. It clouds discrimination and diverts the individual from the higher path of Dharma. The greatest impediments to spiritual and even material progress are seldom created by Dharma itself; rather, they arise from desires that become excessive or unrestrained.

By confining the doctrine of Bādhaka to the Kāma Trikona, the verse acquires a profound internal consistency. Instead of paradoxically treating the auspicious ninth house—the very seat of Dharma—as the principal source of obstruction for fixed ascendants, obstruction is located within the natural domain of worldly desire and attachment.

The resulting cyclic progression—

3 → 11 → 7 → 3

—is neither accidental nor arbitrary. Each member is the Dharma (ninth) position from the preceding one, revealing a subtle geometric design embedded within the horoscope. The doctrine thereby preserves both mathematical elegance and philosophical coherence.

While this interpretation differs from the received tradition and would ultimately require manuscript evidence for definitive textual confirmation, it resolves the longstanding anomaly associated with the ninth house of fixed ascendants and presents a structurally balanced understanding of the Bādhaka principle. It is therefore offered as a reasoned interpretative hypothesis worthy of careful consideration by students and scholars of Jyotiṣa.