
The Entry Sightline
The first view upon entering a home — the Prathama Drishti — programs the energe
Local term: प्रवेश दृश्य — पहली नज़र (Pravēsha Dṛshya — Pehlī Nazar)
Modern Vastu consensus strongly recommends managing the entry sightline. Interior designers and Vastu consultants agree: a cluttered, dark, or bathroom-facing entry creates negative first impressions both energetically and psychologically. Environmental psychology research confirms that first visual impressions upon entering a space set the emotional baseline for the entire experience within.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice; Environmental Psychology research
Unique: Modern practice aligns Vastu with environmental psychology — the 'prospect-refuge' theory confirms that seeing an open, well-lit space upon entry reduces cortisol and increases comfort. The ancient Prathama Drishti principle has scientific backing.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
The first view upon entry should be open, well-lit, and visually attractive — art, greenery, or a deity image as the immediate focal point facing the door.
Acceptable
Clean corridor with warm lighting and a decorative focal point.
Prohibited
Toilet, blank wall, descending staircase, or clutter as first view.
Sub-Rules
- First view upon entry is a pleasant, auspicious sight (deity image, art, plant, open space)▲ Major
- First view is a toilet or bathroom door▼ Major
- First view is a blank wall within 3 feet▼ Moderate
- First view is a descending staircase▼ Major
- Foyer is well-lit with warm lighting▲ Moderate

Principle & Context

The first view upon entering a home — the Prathama Drishti — programs the energetic quality of every re-entry. A pleasant first sight (deity image, open space, warm light) invites positive prana. A toilet, blank wall, or descending staircase as first view contaminates or blocks the incoming energy at the most critical reception point. This is a non-directional principle: regardless of which way the door faces, what lies beyond the threshold matters equally.
Common Violations
Toilet or bathroom door directly visible upon entry
Traditional consequence: Apana Vayu (downward/waste energy) mixes with Prana (incoming life-force) at the most critical reception point. The household develops a pattern of 'contaminated beginnings' — promising starts that decay quickly, opportunities that arrive but carry hidden problems.
Blank wall within 3 feet of the entry
Traditional consequence: Prana enters and immediately hits an obstruction — like breathing into a cloth. Career and opportunities feel blocked. The householder experiences the psychological sensation of 'hitting a wall' in life endeavors.
Descending staircase as first view
Traditional consequence: Energy immediately flows downward upon entry — wealth and opportunity 'drain away' symbolically. The household feels a persistent sense of decline despite effort.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition specifies that a Ganesha image facing the entrance removes obstacles from the incoming prana's path — the first-sight deity acts as an energetic filter.
The Wada's Osari (vestibule) was designed to manage the sightline transition — visitors saw the courtyard (Chowk) through the Osari, never a wall or private space.
Tamil tradition prescribes a Kolam on the entrance floor and a Deepam in the foyer — the first sight is thus both underfoot (sacred geometry) and at eye level (sacred light).
Telugu tradition adds that the first sound upon entry matters alongside the first sight — jingling bells or pleasant wind chimes enhance the first-impression energy.
Jain tradition treats the entry sightline as a form of Samyak Darshana (right perception) — the first visual input upon entering determines the quality of consciousness within the home.
Kerala's Poomukham is a dedicated 'first-impression management zone' — a covered verandah with lamp, seating, and view of the courtyard. No other tradition has such a formal first-sight architectural element.
Gujarati merchant havelis placed a Shri Yantra or Navkar Mantra image at the first-sight point — ensuring that every entry begins with a sacred geometric or mantra impression.
Bengali tradition has the strongest 'first sight' emphasis among all 11 traditions. The Thakur Dalan (deity room) was architecturally positioned to be visible from the entrance — a unique Bengali spatial innovation.
Kalinga tradition derives the domestic first-sight principle from temple architecture — as the Jagamohana is the first space after the temple gate, the foyer must be the first space after the house gate.
Sikh tradition treats the first sight upon entry as a form of Darshan — the act of seeing the sacred. The home entry should mirror the Gurdwara experience: first view = sacred presence.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Adjust door orientation to face North — evidence-based spatial correction
Modern VastuPlace an auspicious image (Ganesha, Lakshmi, or a nature scene) directly facing the main door on the opposite wall
If a toilet is visible, keep its door permanently closed and add a curtain or screen to block the sightline
If a blank wall is the first view, hang a large mirror or vibrant artwork to create visual depth and beauty
Install warm, bright lighting in the foyer to ensure the first impression is luminous regardless of the time of entry
Remedies from other traditions
Adjust door orientation to face Uttara — Yantra installation and Vedic Havan
Vedic VastuAdjust door orientation to face Uttar — Hemadpanthi stone remediation
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“What the householder sees first upon crossing the threshold determines what the dwelling receives first. A pleasant first sight invites Lakshmi — an inauspicious first sight invites Alakshmi. The Griha Mukha must lead the eye to beauty, not to refuse.”
“The passage beyond the Mukhya Dwara shall open to a hall or courtyard — never to a wall, a privy, or a descending stair. The eye must travel forward and upward upon entry, for the prana follows the gaze.”
“Beyond the threshold, the Griha shall reveal its best face. The Prathamam Darshanam — the first vision — determines the quality of energy that the entrant carries into the home. An obstructed or impure first view contaminates all subsequent spaces.”
“Vishvakarma decrees: the path from threshold to interior shall show light, space, and auspiciousness. A dwelling whose entry reveals a Mala Sthana (waste-place) at first glance mixes Apana with Prana at the very point of reception.”

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