Rāśi and Āditya Career/Vocational Profiles

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Open most career-astrology references and you’ll meet the same handful of generic associations. The classical Vedic tradition reads career far more specifically than that, and far more interestingly.

Each of the twelve rāśis carries a precise conceptual territory drawn from its lord, element, modality, social-quality, position in the Kālapuruṣa (the cosmic body of the zodiac), and the habitations described in classical texts like Phaladīpikā and Bṛhat Parāśara Hora Śāstra.

Layered on top, each sign also holds one of the twelve Ādityas, the solar deities and sons of Aditi, who preside over the twelve months as the Sun moves through the zodiac. These twelve forms of the Sun (Savitṛ, Aryaman, Mitra, Varuṇa, Indra, Vivasvān, Pūṣan, Parjanya, Aṁśumān, Bhaga, Tvaṣṭṛ, and Viṣṇu) add a whole second layer of vocational meaning.

I’ve compiled this into a working reference Karma Significations of Rāśis and Ādityas built for both serious students of jyotiṣa and curious enthusiasts. Whether you’re learning the system or refining your consultation work, the document gives you a much more discriminating keyword field to work from than the standard tables.

WHAT YOU WILL FIND IN THE BOOKLET:

  • Classical keyword sets for each of the twelve rāśis, anchored in classical sources and the lineage teachings

  • Modern career and industry mappings traced back to each classical signification, not generic “Western-Vedic” career lists, but a careful tracing of where each modern field actually lives within the classical framework

  • The twelve Ādityas, each given the same treatment, layered onto the rāśi base

A quick example of what the layering does: Meṣa (Aries) alone gives the warrior-surgeon-engineer territory. But Meṣa-Savitṛ narrows it — Savitṛ is the establisher who supports births and maintains what is created, so Meṣa-Savitṛ leans into the founder-and-protector side of Meṣa rather than the raider: the founder-CEO, the obstetrician, the registry-officer, the close-protection officer, the city-planner.

The PDF is free for all. If you’re not yet on the list, hit the subscribe button below and you’ll get instant access - plus future posts and resources in the same register.

If you find it useful, please share it with another astrology friend or student. The tradition lives by being passed on.

Open most career-astrology references and you’ll meet the same handful of generic associations. The classical Vedic tradition reads career far more specifically than that, and far more interestingly.

Each of the twelve rāśis carries a precise conceptual territory drawn from its lord, element, modality, social-quality, position in the Kālapuruṣa (the cosmic body of the zodiac), and the habitations described in classical texts like Phaladīpikā and Bṛhat Parāśara Hora Śāstra.

Layered on top, each sign also holds one of the twelve Ādityas, the solar deities and sons of Aditi, who preside over the twelve months as the Sun moves through the zodiac. These twelve forms of the Sun (Savitṛ, Aryaman, Mitra, Varuṇa, Indra, Vivasvān, Pūṣan, Parjanya, Aṁśumān, Bhaga, Tvaṣṭṛ, and Viṣṇu) add a whole second layer of vocational meaning.

I’ve compiled this into a working reference Karma Significations of Rāśis and Ādityas built for both serious students of jyotiṣa and curious enthusiasts. Whether you’re learning the system or refining your consultation work, the document gives you a much more discriminating keyword field to work from than the standard tables.

WHAT YOU WILL FIND IN THE BOOKLET:

  • Classical keyword sets for each of the twelve rāśis, anchored in classical sources and the lineage teachings

  • Modern career and industry mappings traced back to each classical signification, not generic “Western-Vedic” career lists, but a careful tracing of where each modern field actually lives within the classical framework

  • The twelve Ādityas, each given the same treatment, layered onto the rāśi base

A quick example of what the layering does: Meṣa (Aries) alone gives the warrior-surgeon-engineer territory. But Meṣa-Savitṛ narrows it — Savitṛ is the establisher who supports births and maintains what is created, so Meṣa-Savitṛ leans into the founder-and-protector side of Meṣa rather than the raider: the founder-CEO, the obstetrician, the registry-officer, the close-protection officer, the city-planner.

The PDF is free for all. If you’re not yet on the list, hit the subscribe button below and you’ll get instant access - plus future posts and resources in the same register.

If you find it useful, please share it with another astrology friend or student. The tradition lives by being passed on.