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Raksha Bandhan 2025: 7.5-Hour Muhurat To Tie Rakhi, Rahukaal To Last 1 Hour, 40 Minutes

Raksha Bandhan 2025: 7.5-Hour Muhurat To Tie Rakhi, Rahukaal To Last 1 Hour, 40 Minutes

News182 days ago
In 2025, Rakshabandhan will be celebrated on Saturday, August 9. This year offers over seven and a half hours of auspicious time to tie Rakhi and celebrate the bond of siblings
Rakshabandhan, the joyous festival celebrating the eternal bond between brothers and sisters, is one of the most cherished occasions in Hindu culture. On this day, sisters tie a sacred Rakhi thread on their brothers' wrists, praying for their well-being, while brothers pledge to protect their sisters.
In 2025, Rakshabandhan falls on Saturday, August 9. This year, the festival comes with an auspicious window of over seven and a half hours to perform the Rakhi ritual. What makes it even more special is that the day will be completely Bhadra -free, allowing celebrations to begin right from the morning.
Auspicious Muhurata for Rakshabandhan 2025
According to the Hindu calendar, Rakshabandhan is celebrated on Sawan Purnima, the full moon day that marks the conclusion of the sacred month of Sawan, beloved to Lord Shiva. This year, Sawan Purnima begins at 2:12 PM on August 8 and ends at 1:24 PM on August 9.
Avoid Tying Rakhi During Rahukaal
Despite the Bhadra -free muhurta, Rakhi should not be tied during Rahukaal, which falls between 9:07 AM and 10:47 AM on the same day. Rahukaal, lasting for 1 hour and 40 minutes, is considered inauspicious for performing any sacred or important tasks.
In astrology, Rahu is a shadow planet associated with confusion, misfortune, and delay. That is why no new ventures, rituals, or auspicious ceremonies are recommended during Rahukaal, including the tying of Rakhi.
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In 1927, Carl Jung stood in his Zurich home, gripped by a vivid dream of a mandala, a radiant circle of intricate patterns, pulsing with meaning, which he later described in Memories, Dreams, Reflections as a 'Window on Eternity'. This vision, a map of the psyche's quest for wholeness, became a cornerstone of his theories, deeply enriched by his 1938 journey through India's spiritual heartland. July 27 was Jung's 150th birth anniversary. In today's fractured world, Jung's ideas, rooted in archetypes, the collective unconscious and the integration of opposites, feel more vital than ever. Balance and meaning Born in 1875 in a quiet Swiss village, Carl Gustav Jung was a psychiatrist, philosopher and mystic who saw the human psyche as a vast, dynamic universe. Unlike his mentor psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, who viewed the mind as a battleground of repressed desires, Jung believed it was a living system striving for balance and meaning. 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The raw passion depicted in the sculptures, blending the sacred and sensual, mirrored his concept of the shadow self, the hidden, often uncomfortable aspects of the psyche we must confront. He later wrote that Konark's imagery spoke to the 'living reality of the psyche', where opposites like light and dark coexist. In Bhubaneswar, he sketched temple carvings of Kali, the fierce goddess of destruction and renewal. Kali's dual nature – terrifying yet transformative – resonated with Jung's view of the shadow as both destructive and creative. He saw her as an archetype, a universal symbol of the psyche's power to devour and renew. Jung's encounter with the Tibetan Book of the Dead during his Indian sojourn further deepened his theories. This Buddhist text, a guide for navigating the Bardos, or transitional states, between death and rebirth, fascinated him. 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