🐉 Rahu
1st, 5th, 9th:
Born disruptor. Magnetic aura, destined to stand out.
Breaks rules, creates new paths. Vision beyond limits. ⚡👑
Your courage to be different becomes your legacy.
2nd, 6th, 10th:
Hungry for mastery + material success.
Thrives in risk, innovation, and hustle. 💼🔥
When focused ethically, turns chaos into empire.
3rd, 7th, 11th:
Networking genius, fearless communicator.
Draws fame, influence, and followers easily. 💬🌍
Knows how to sell dreams + ideas that move masses.
4th, 8th, 12th:
Born mystic, shadow worker, karmic alchemist. 🌑🕉️
Transforms through loss, secrecy, or solitude.
Hidden power becomes spiritual dominance.
#Astrology #RahuPower #KarmicNodes #VedicAstrology #RahuEnergy
trying to teach my little sister that there is a lot of prudence in just being stern and unlikable in the right situations. you can make life so much easier for yourself
Underrated life advice: Schedule your fun first. The vacation. The dinner. The concert. The weekend trip. Put joy on the calendar before work fills it up. Most people work first and play with what's left, and there's never anything left. Book fun like a meeting. Treat joy like an obligation. Happiness needs planning too.
Lower belly pouch? It might be your hips. Forward-tilted hips can push the stomach outward. Glute bridges help bring the hips back, hip flexor stretches release tightness, dead bugs build pelvic control, and rows plus face pulls support better posture. Fix your pelvic alignment
The older you get, the more you realize luck is mostly exposure. If you sit in the same place, have the same routine, talking to the same people, nothing new really happens. You have to tackle the world to succeed. Travel more. Talk to people.
🌈 Placements Linked With Same-Gender / Bisexual Interest
(Boundary-breaking attraction. Fluid identity. Unconventional love patterns.)
→ Strong Rahu Influence on Venus
→ Venus–Uranus Aspect
→ Venus–Mars Conjunction or Tight Aspect
→ Rahu in 5H or 7H
→ Aquarius / Uranus Dominance
→ Venus in Aquarius or Gemini
→ Ketu Influencing Venus or 7H
Tomatoes need olive oil to release their lycopene. Spinach needs lemon to release its iron. Turmeric needs black pepper to release its curcumin. Most nutrients need a partner to maximizetheir benefits. Cook with that in mind. 🫶🏽🫶🏽🫶🏽
When a rabbit's partner dies, the surviving rabbit can be dead within a day. Just from grief. The stress physically shuts its stomach down. Vets call it GI stasis, and it's a known killer of bonded partners. What you're watching might be the first hours of it.
Rabbit vets actually encourage letting the survivor stay with the body. They tell owners to give the rabbit time with its partner, sniffing, nudging, lying next to her, sometimes for a few hours. Without that goodbye, the survivor can spend weeks searching the home for a partner who never comes back. With it, they're more likely to eat the next day. More likely to live.
In 2008, researchers at the University of Edinburgh built an unusual cage to measure how much rabbits need each other. It had weighted doors at both ends. On one side, food. On the other, a few minutes of contact with another rabbit. The doors got heavier over time, so the rabbit had to really want it. The rabbits worked nearly as hard for the friend as they did for the food.
Watch a bonded pair and you see why. They follow each other around all day. Sleep pressed together at night. Groom each other's face, head, and ears in long, careful sessions. When their partner is close they make a soft clicking sound with their teeth, called tooth purring. It sounds like a cat's purr.
When one of them dies, the survivor's body reacts before its mind catches up. Rabbits are prey animals. Almost everything in the wild wants to eat them. Their bodies evolved one survival rule: when something scary happens, drop everything and run. So a rabbit's stress system is wired to switch hunger off in a crisis. Run first, eat later. That same wiring kicks in when a bonded mate suddenly disappears, except now there's nothing to run from. The rabbit hunches into itself, stops eating, and pulls away from everything around it. Some spend weeks searching the spot where their partner used to be.
Rabbit welfare groups have documented cases of surviving partners who simply stopped eating after their mate died. They sometimes call it dying of heartbreak.
The brown rabbit in the video is doing what a bonded rabbit does when his partner is suddenly gone. He stays close to her body. He keeps watch. He says goodbye the only way a rabbit can.
If he survives the next two weeks, it will be because someone notices he has stopped eating and gets him to a vet who knows rabbits. If he doesn't, his stomach will give out before anything else does. A bonded rabbit's body is built around being with another rabbit. When that other rabbit is gone, the body itself starts to fall apart.