Uttara Ashada
I live my truth with steady devotion while allowing my path to be sustainable.
There’s something steady here. Not the rising wave of Purva Ashada…but what remains after the wave has chosen its direction. This is not about proving. This is about enduring.
Uttara Ashada is the energy of lasting truth. The kind that does not need urgency
because it is built to remain. Uttara Ashada carries the rhythm of unwavering devotion. To what matters. To what is ethical. To what can stand the test of time.
When the Moon lives here at birth, there is often a profound relationship with integrity.
A deep inner pull toward what is right. And what is meaningful and what deserves commitment beyond the moment. And within that…a karmic rhythm around responsibility and inner authority.
Because when truth matters deeply…there can also be a tendency to carry the weight of living it. To hold yourself to high standards. To keep going. To be strong enough, steady enough, worthy enough.
Sometimes long after the body is asking for softness.
Sometimes this can feel like a strong moral compass, deep perseverance, a sense of responsibility to live with purpose, or difficulty resting when there is still more to do.
And yet…this is not simply pressure. It is a soul remembering devotion.
Uttara Ashada teaches that true victory is not in constant striving. It is in alignment that lasts. In values that remain true even when no one is watching. In building a life that is both meaningful…and sustainable.
There is something noble here. A quiet strength. The path is not to abandon your commitment…but to let devotion include yourself.
To remember endurance is most powerful when it is rooted in wholeness.
Practice
Notice where you are deeply committed right now.
A role.
A value.
A responsibility.
Pause and gently ask: Can I honor this devotion in a way that also sustains me?
Let integrity include care.
Anchor
I live my truth with steady devotion while allowing my path to be sustainable.
If you sit with this…what becomes possible when your strength is not measured only by how much you carry…but by how truthfully you continue?

