
Time-of-Day Entry Direction
The daily entry and first activity direction should harmonise with the sun's pos
Local term: दिन-दिशा-क्रम / सूर्य-मुख (Dina-Diśā-Krama / Sūrya-Mukha)
Modern application is simply: face East briefly each morning. Step onto an East-facing balcony, open an East window first, or do a brief morning stretch facing East. This zero-cost, zero-time practice provides daily directional Vastu alignment. The evening westward awareness can be as simple as watching the sunset. The key is daily repetition creating cumulative alignment.
Unique: Zero-cost daily practice — the most accessible temporal Vastu practice, requiring no purchases, no structural changes, and seconds of daily time.
The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
all
Conscious eastward orientation each morning + evening westward awareness, per modern Vastu consensus integrating classical prescriptions with contemporary building practice — the architect must verify compliance for optimal results.
Acceptable
all
Brief daily morning eastward moment.
Prohibited
all
Habitual first-action facing West — opposing the solar cycle daily.
Sub-Rules
- Morning first entry from East or NE, facing the rising sun's direction▲ Moderate
- Daily directional awareness at entry — conscious moment of solar alignment▲ Moderate
- East window opened first each morning before door exit▲ Minor
- Habitual first entry from direction opposing solar cycle▼ Moderate
- No directional or temporal awareness at dwelling entry▼ Moderate

The daily entry and first activity direction should harmonise with the sun's position — East in the morning, West in the evening, North at night. This creates a daily micro-alignment between the occupant's spatial orientation and the cosmic light cycle. The practice is subtle but accumulates impact through daily repetition.
Common Violations
Habitual morning first-action facing West — away from the rising sun
Traditional consequence: The occupant begins each day in opposition to the solar cycle — a subtle but accumulating misalignment. Over months, this contributes to low morning energy, difficulty starting the day, and a feeling of working against the natural rhythm.
No directional awareness at daily entry — unconscious crossing of threshold
Traditional consequence: The daily opportunity for micro-alignment with the cosmic cycle is wasted. The threshold crossing is the dwelling's daily 'greeting' — an unconscious greeting carries no intention and no alignment benefit.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Surya Namaskar integration — the twelve-posture practice is simultaneously physical exercise, spiritual worship, and directional Vastu alignment.
Aarti directional shift — morning Aarti faces East (sunrise), evening Aarti faces West (sunset), naturally cycling through solar directions.
Kolam as directional practice — the first stroke of the morning Kolam faces East, embedding directional awareness into the day's first creative act.
Tulasi Vrindavanam approach from East — watering the courtyard basil plant from the eastern side aligns a practical gardening act with directional Vastu.
Jain Pratikraman facing East — morning self-reflection practice inherently provides eastward directional alignment.
Nilavilakku as daily directional anchor — the standing brass lamp in the NE puja room is the focal point of morning eastward-NE orientation.
Sandhya Divo — evening transitional lamp lit at sunset, marking the directional shift from West (setting sun) to North (night sky).
Morning Pranam to the East — a brief bow toward the eastern sky is the simplest daily directional alignment, deeply embedded in Bengali culture.
Morning Surya Pranam at entrance — solar greeting at the threshold combines entry-direction and solar-alignment in a single brief practice.
Amrit Vela pre-dawn — the pre-sunrise devotional practice transcends directional alignment, with solar-directional awareness beginning at actual sunrise.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Face East each morning briefly (behavioral). Open East window first (behavioral). Evening sunset awareness facing West (behavioral). Surya Yantra near entrance for symbolic alignment (elemental).
Modern VastuBegin each day by facing East — open the East window first, perform morning prayer or stretching facing East, or step onto the East-facing balcony before starting the day
At the main entrance, pause briefly and acknowledge the direction before crossing the threshold — a moment of conscious directional awareness that aligns the daily entry with temporal Vastu
If the main entrance does not face East, place a sun-image or Surya Yantra near the entrance and glance at it during the morning exit — a symbolic eastward orientation
Remedies from other traditions
Ritual timing and placement correction per Vedic calendar tradition
Vedic VastuRitual timing and placement correction per Maharashtrian calendar tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“Varahamihira teaches: the wise householder greets the morning sun from the Purva (East) of his dwelling before stepping out. His first gaze is eastward, his first step is sunward. In the evening, he returns facing the Paschima (West) with the setting sun at his back, bringing the day's light-memory into the dwelling.”
“The Manasara prescribes that the day's first action in the dwelling should face the Surya-Disha (sun-direction). Morning: face East. Noon: face South (sun overhead but tilted south in Indian latitudes). Evening: face West. Night: face North (star-direction). This is Dina-Disha-Krama (daily directional sequence).”
“The Mayamatam notes that the dwelling's usage shifts with the day. Morning activities face the rising light. Evening activities face the setting light. Night activities face the cool northern sky. This daily rhythm mirrors the seasonal rhythm of room-use adjustment.”
“Vishvakarma instructs that the first step across the threshold each morning should be the right foot, facing the direction of the sun's current position. The dwelling's entrance is its daily greeting to the cosmos — the greeting must align with the cosmic light.”

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