
Convex Mirror at Entrance
A small convex mirror placed outside the main entrance door deflects negative en
Local term: उत्तल दर्पण — बाह्य दोष निवारक (Uttala Darpaṇa — Bāhya Dōsha Nivāraka)
Modern Vastu supports the convex mirror for T-junction and sharp-corner deflection, though it is more commonly recommended in traditional practice than in modern corporate Vastu. Feng Shui convergence is strong — the Bagua mirror tradition closely parallels this practice. Modern consultants note that the psychological benefit (visible protection) supplements any energetic effect.
Source: Contemporary Vastu; Feng Shui Bagua mirror tradition
Unique: Strong Feng Shui convergence — the Bagua mirror is essentially the same practice. Modern practice adds psychological benefit: visible protection reduces the homeowner's anxiety about external threats.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
Small convex mirror (8-12 inch) outside entrance facing identified external threat. Supplemented by plants and positive entrance décor.
Acceptable
all
Convex reflective surface near entrance. Inside window-placement as last resort.
Prohibited
all
A convex mirror placed INSIDE the home distorts and disperses positive interior energy — the divergent reflection scatters the dwelling's accumulated prosperity. The convex mirror is strictly an exterior-facing deflection tool. Never use a concave (inward-curving) mirror as a substitute — concave mirrors concentrate rather than disperse energy. The contemporary Vastu consensus synthesizing classical prescriptions reinforce this prohibition across all directions.
Sub-Rules
- Small convex mirror placed outside the main door to deflect T-junction or sharp-corner energy▲ Minor
- Home faces a T-junction, dead-end road, or sharp building corner (Veedhi Shoola exists)▼ Moderate
- Convex mirror placed inside the home (incorrect — disperses positive interior energy)▼ Minor

Principle & Context

A small convex mirror placed outside the main entrance door deflects negative energy from external Vastu defects — T-junctions (Veedhi Shoola), sharp building corners, or dead-end roads. The convex surface disperses the concentrated negative energy into harmless scattered rays. This is a NON-DIRECTIONAL remedy — it works regardless of the door's facing direction. The convex mirror is strictly an exterior-facing tool; placed inside the home, it disperses positive energy and becomes harmful.
Common Violations
Convex mirror placed inside the home
Traditional consequence: The convex mirror's divergent reflection scatters and disperses energy — placed inside, it disperses the home's accumulated positive energy, creating a sense of dissipation and loss. The protective tool becomes a destructive one when used in the wrong location.
Overly large convex mirror at entrance (greater than 12 inches)
Traditional consequence: An oversized convex mirror disperses too aggressively — it pushes away positive visitors and opportunities along with negative energy. The deflection should be subtle, not aggressive.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition classifies the convex mirror as a Raksha Yantra (protective device) — in the same category as Navagraha Yantras and protective mantras.
Pune's dense old-city Peth areas created frequent Veedhi Shoola situations — Wada architects integrated convex reflective elements into exterior wall design as standard practice.
Tamil tradition uniquely combines the Sudarshana Chakra (Vishnu's disc weapon) with the convex mirror — a single object that provides both religious protection and Vastu deflection.
Telugu apartment Vastu consultants have standardized the convex mirror recommendation for buildings facing road junctions — pre-packaged Vastu convex mirrors are sold at Hyderabad religious shops.
Jain minimalism — a small, humble polished disc rather than an ornate mirror. The protection should be effective but not ostentatious.
Kerala's famous Aranmula Kannadi (metal mirror) serves as the traditional Vastu convex deflector — connecting one of the world's most prized mirror-craft traditions with Vastu protection.
Gujarati merchant tradition extends the convex mirror to Dukan Raksha (shop protection) — small convex mirrors at shop entrances facing busy intersections are common across Gujarat's commercial districts.
Bengali practice is more urban-focused — the convex mirror recommendation is specifically for modern apartment buildings facing large road intersections in Kolkata and other Bengal cities.
Kalinga tradition combines the convex mirror with Tulsi plants and Jagannath imagery at the entrance — a layered protection system using mirror, plant, and religious symbol together.
Sikh tradition adds visible-defense principle — protecting the home's entrance is a duty, not superstition. The convex mirror is a practical defensive tool.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Relocate decorative element to the North zone per Modern tradition
Modern VastuPlace a small (8-12 inch) convex mirror on the outside wall above or beside the main entrance door, facing the T-junction, sharp corner, or dead-end road
Use a polished brass or copper Sudarshana-style convex disc — combines religious protection symbolism with Vastu deflection function
If the building society or apartment rules prohibit exterior mirrors, place a small convex mirror just inside the entrance door in a window facing the external threat — partial effectiveness
Remedies from other traditions
Relocate decorative element to the Uttara zone per Vedic tradition
Vedic VastuRelocate decorative element to the Uttar zone per Maharashtrian tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“Against the Veedhi Shoola (road-arrow) that strikes the dwelling's face, place a convex reflecting disc upon the outer wall. The curved mirror disperses the concentrated assault into harmless rays — what was a single piercing arrow becomes scattered light.”
“The Matsya Darpana (fish-eye mirror) is the architect's defense against external Dosha — a small curved reflector placed above the Dwara (door) that catches concentrated negative energy and scatters it in all directions, rendering it harmless before it can enter.”
“The outward-curving reflector is a Kavach (shield) for the entrance. Place it upon the outer face of the Dwar where sharp angles from neighboring structures or road-junctions threaten the portal's sanctity.”
“Vishvakarma prescribes the Unnata Darpana (raised/convex mirror) for dwellings facing Veedhi Shoola. The convex surface catches the incoming Dosha and disperses it — like a rounded stone in a stream that parts the water without being harmed.”

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