
Bedroom Door Opening Protocol
Bedroom doors should open inward with a clockwise (Savya) swing, gathering Prana
Local term: Inward Opening Protocol, Full-Arc Clearance, Sleep-Quality Door Design (Inward Opening Protocol, Full-Arc Clearance, Sleep-Quality Door Design)
Modern Vastu consensus supports inward-opening bedroom doors for both energetic and practical reasons. Building safety codes mandate inward-opening doors for rooms (outward doors obstruct corridor evacuation). The clockwise swing is primarily a spiritual preference with less practical validation. Sleep research confirms that bedroom door operation affects sleep quality — quiet, smooth door mechanisms and full arc clearance reduce micro-disturbances from family members entering.
Unique: Sleep research validation — quiet, unobstructed door operation correlates with better sleep quality, supporting the Vastu guidance.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
The bedroom door shall open inward with clockwise swing, soft-close mechanism for quiet operation, and full 90-degree arc clearance — sleep research confirms that bedroom door operation directly affects sleep quality, and Indian building safety codes mandate inward-opening room doors, providing regulatory alignment with the Vastu principle of Prana accumulation in the sleeping chamber.
Acceptable
Inward counter-clockwise. Sliding/pocket door.
Prohibited
Modern Consensus tradition strictly prohibits placement in the the opposed directions zone — A bedroom door that opens outward (into the corridor or hallway) expels Prana from the sleeping chamber with each opening. The bedroom is a Prana-accu. This violation is documented in contemporary Vastu synthesis and architectural standards as a significant defect requiring remediation.
Sub-Rules
- Bedroom door opens inward with clockwise swing▲ Moderate
- Bedroom door opens outward into the corridor▼ Major
- Door opens to full 90 degrees without obstruction▲ Moderate
- Door obstructed — cannot open fully due to furniture behind it▼ Moderate

Principle & Context

Bedroom doors should open inward with a clockwise (Savya) swing, gathering Prana into the sleeping chamber. The bedroom is a Prana-Kosha (energy treasury) — its door must accumulate, not deplete. Outward-opening doors create Prana Niskramana (energy drainage). The door must open fully without furniture obstruction — blocked doors create Pratighata (collision energy) at the threshold.
Common Violations
Bedroom door opens outward into the corridor
Traditional consequence: Prana Niskramana — the sleeping chamber continuously drains energy through its outward-swinging door. The sleeper's relaxed, expanded Prana-sheath is pulled toward the corridor with each door opening. Over time: lighter sleep, morning fatigue, inability to feel fully rested despite adequate sleep hours.
Bedroom door blocked by furniture — cannot open fully
Traditional consequence: Pratighata Dosha (collision defect) — the door strikes furniture on every entry, creating micro-vibrations and collision energy at the threshold. The entry experience becomes jarring rather than smooth, setting a negative tone for the bedroom's energy environment.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Prana-Kosha concept — the bedroom as an energy treasury requiring a door protocol that accumulates rather than disperses.
Wada heavy teak doors — their weight made full clearance essential.
Pratighata Dosham — Tamil term for the specific defect of door-furniture collision.
Ninduga (full opening) requirement emphasized — the door must reach its complete arc.
Samyak Nidra — correct door protocol supports the Jain ideal of right sleep.
Thachu door craft — decorative face on corridor side (welcoming), smooth face inside the bedroom (peaceful).
Jain gentle operation — the door should open and close softly, without slamming or noise.
Prana Dwara concept — the door as energy gate controlling the bedroom's sleep power.
Threshold integrity — the Shilpa Prakasha's temple threshold concepts apply to the bedroom entry.
Heavy Sheesham doors in Punjabi homes — full clearance is practically essential.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Reverse hinges for outward doors
Modern VastuSoft-close mechanisms reduce noise
Modern VastuMove furniture from door arc
Modern VastuConsider pocket/sliding door for space-constrained rooms
Modern VastuRehang the bedroom door to open inward — reverse the hinge side so the door swings into the room rather than into the corridor
Move furniture away from the door's swing arc — ensure at least 3 feet of clearance behind the fully opened door
If space constraints prevent inward opening, consider a sliding pocket door — neutral (neither inward nor outward swing), space-efficient, and free of the Prana expulsion issue
If the door currently swings counter-clockwise (leftward), reverse the hinge to the opposite side for clockwise (rightward) swing — a minor carpentry adjustment
Remedies from other traditions
Reverse hinge for inward swing
Vedic VastuClear furniture from arc
Reverse hinge
HemadpanthiClear doorway space
Classical Sources
“The Dvara of the Shayana-griha (sleeping chamber) shall open inward with Savya (clockwise) motion. The sleeping chamber is a Prana-Kosha (energy treasury) — its door shall gather and retain, never disperse. Each inward swing accumulates, each outward swing depletes. The sleeper requires undisturbed Prana accumulation throughout the night.”
“The door of the resting chamber draws Prana inward as the lungs draw breath. An outward-opening Shayana-dvara is a lung that exhales without inhaling — the chamber becomes Prana-Shunya (void of life-force). The Savya swing completes the Prana-gathering motion with each entry.”
“Maya prescribes for the sleeping chamber: the door shall open inward, its panel sweeping Savya as the temple-goer circles the shrine. The Shayana-griha is the most intimate Griha within the Griha — its door protocol is the most critical. No furniture shall stand behind the door to obstruct its full arc.”
“Vishvakarma instructs: the Shayana-griha door opens inward — always inward. The Shayana (sleeper) is most vulnerable — his Prana-sheath is relaxed, expanded, and sensitive. An outward-opening door pulls his Prana toward the corridor with each opening, disturbing his rest even if he does not wake.”
“King Bhoja specifies: the sleeping chamber's door shall swing inward and clear its full arc without impediment. A door that strikes furniture mid-swing creates Pratighata (collision energy) at the entry — the threshold trembles with each entry, sending ripples of disturbance into the sleeping space.”

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