
Broken Items Prohibition
No broken items in the home — each Bhagna-vastu (broken item) is a Dosha source
Local term: भग्न-वस्तु निषेध — आधुनिक वास्तु सहमति (Bhagna-Vastu Niṣedha — Ādhunika Vāstu Sahamati)
Modern environmental psychology's 'broken windows theory' — originally formulated by James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling in 1982 — independently validates the Vastu broken-items prohibition. The theory demonstrates that visible signs of disorder and neglect in an environment trigger a psychological cascade of further neglect, reduced maintenance motivation, and declining standards. Applied to domestic settings, research shows that homes with broken or malfunctioning items correlate with higher occupant stress levels, reduced sense of control, and lower life satisfaction. Leaking taps literally waste water and money — the average household leak wastes thousands of litres annually, making the Vastu 'wealth drain' metaphor factually accurate. Contemporary Vastu consultants cite the broken-items audit as the highest-ROI correction: zero structural change, immediate psychological benefit, measurable financial savings on utilities.
Source: Contemporary Vastu compilations; Environmental psychology (Wilson & Kelling, broken windows theory); Home maintenance research
Unique: The 'broken windows theory' from criminology independently arrived at the same conclusion as Vastu Shastra thousands of years later — visible disorder begets more disorder. Modern research adds measurable data: leaking taps waste specific quantities of water/money, broken items correlate with specific stress biomarkers, and home maintenance quality predicts occupant wellbeing outcomes.

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
All household items should be maintained in functional, intact condition — regular maintenance audits prevent deterioration from accumulating. Modern psychology confirms that a well-maintained home directly supports occupant mental health, sense of control, and life satisfaction.
Acceptable
Items under active repair may be stored out of living spaces temporarily — the key principle is that visible broken items should not be part of the daily living environment where they create subconscious stress signals.
Prohibited
Permanently retaining broken, damaged, or non-functional items in living spaces creates a compounding neglect effect — modern environmental psychology demonstrates that each visible defect lowers the household's maintenance threshold, making further neglect progressively more likely.
Sub-Rules
- Home is free of broken, damaged, or non-working items▲ Critical
- Broken mirror in the home — fragmented reflection/identity▼ Critical
- Non-working clock on display — stopped time/progress▼ Major
- Leaking taps or plumbing — wealth draining▼ Critical

Principle & Context

No broken items in the home — each Bhagna-vastu (broken item) is a Dosha source radiating decay and decline. Broken mirror = worst. Leaking taps = wealth seepage. Stopped clock = progress stoppage. Repair or remove immediately. Direction-independent, universal prohibition.
Common Violations
Broken mirror in the home — fragmented reflection
Traditional consequence: A broken mirror fragments the viewer's Pratibimba (reflection/image). Symbolically, this fragments the household's identity, relationships, and self-image. It is considered the single most inauspicious broken item in Vastu. A cracked mirror must be removed immediately — not just placed out of sight but removed from the home entirely.
Leaking taps or plumbing — wealth seepage
Traditional consequence: Leaking water = leaking wealth. Each drop that drips unnecessarily represents Dhana (money) that drains from the household. The constant drip also represents Chinta (worry) and Ashanti (unrest). Plumbing repairs are considered urgent Vastu corrections.
Non-working clock on display — time/progress stoppage
Traditional consequence: A stopped clock symbolizes stopped progress for the household. Time frozen = prosperity frozen. A non-working clock on display creates Kala-sthambhana (time stagnation) that affects the household's forward momentum.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
The Vedic North Indian tradition uniquely ranks the five worst Bhagna-vastu in a specific hierarchy of severity — broken mirror at the top, followed by stopped clock, cracked cooking vessel, broken bed, and leaking pipe. This ranked system allows precise prioritization of repairs, a feature not found in other regional traditions.
The Maharashtrian tradition uniquely emphasises broken Deva-murti (deity statues) as the worst category of Bhagna-vastu — a chipped Ganapati or cracked Lakshmi idol in the Devghar requires immediate Visarjan (ritual immersion) and replacement, a rule enforced more strictly in Maharashtra than in any other tradition.
The Tamil Agama tradition uniquely extends the broken-items prohibition to the kitchen with special severity — broken cooking vessels (Udaindha-samayal-patra) introduce Kuttram directly into the family's food, making kitchen items the highest priority for repair. This kitchen-first approach is specific to Tamil practice.
The Kakatiya structural perfectionism tradition uniquely extends from monumental architecture to household objects — the same standard that required flawless temple pillars at the Thousand-Pillar Temple in Warangal was applied to domestic items, creating a culture where even minor chips or cracks in household vessels triggered immediate replacement.
The Jain ethical dimension uniquely frames broken-item retention as Pramada (spiritual negligence) — in the Hoysala-Jain worldview, the householder has a Dharmic obligation to maintain every object in the home, and failure to repair or remove broken items is not merely a Vastu defect but a lapse in Samyak-Charitra (right conduct).
Kerala's tropical climate makes the broken-items prohibition uniquely urgent — wood rot, laterite erosion, and brass tarnishing in humid conditions mean that items deteriorate faster than in drier climates. The Perumthachan tradition therefore prescribes seasonal Nalukettu audits (Onam and Vishu seasons) specifically to catch damage early before it compounds.
The Gujarati Jain tradition uniquely frames broken-item retention as a violation of Aparigraha — clinging to a damaged, non-functional possession is itself a form of unhealthy attachment. This philosophical framework transforms the Vastu prohibition into a Jain ethical practice, making disposal of broken items a spiritual act of non-attachment.
The Bengali tradition uniquely elevates the Bhanga-aayna (broken mirror) to the status of a singular, extreme-severity defect — Bengali households fear a cracked mirror more intensely than any other broken item. The Tantric Chhidra-bindu (defect point) framework used in Bengali Vastu creates a systematic energy-mapping approach to broken-item assessment.
The Naba-Kalebara (new body) theology uniquely frames broken-item replacement as a sacred renewal parallel to the Jagannath idol replacement ceremony — giving the Odia householder a divine precedent for releasing broken possessions rather than clinging to them. This theological justification for disposal is unique to Kalinga practice.
The Sikh spiritual framework uniquely connects broken-item maintenance to Kirat Karni (honest labour) and Chardi Kala (ever-rising spirit) — maintaining a defect-free home is not merely a Vastu practice but an expression of the Sikh devotional commitment to diligent stewardship of one's dwelling as an extension of one's spiritual discipline.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Conduct a systematic home maintenance audit using a room-by-room checklist — modern property management standard
Modern VastuSchedule quarterly maintenance reviews to catch deterioration early — preventive maintenance is more cost-effective than reactive repair
Modern VastuConduct a home audit: identify and remove or repair all broken, chipped, cracked, or non-functioning items
Perform Vastu Shanti Puja after a comprehensive broken-items removal to cleanse the residual Dosha energy left behind by long-retained broken items in the home
Remove broken mirrors entirely from the home — do not store them; dispose of safely
Repair or replace all non-working clocks — if repair is not possible, remove from display
Remedies from other traditions
Conduct a systematic Bhagna-vastu audit room by room — identify, list, and prioritize all broken items using the five-category severity hierarchy
Vedic VastuPerform Shani Shanti Puja after removing long-retained broken items to cleanse the accumulated Kshaya-dosha from the dwelling
Conduct a seasonal Wada-tapasni (house inspection) — the Peshwa-era practice of systematic identification and repair of all Tutleli-vastu
HemadpanthiPerform Ganapati Visarjan for any chipped or broken Deva-murti, followed by Pratishthapana (installation) of a new intact idol
Classical Sources
“The Bhagna-vastu (broken item) in the Griha is Kshaya-suchaka (indicator of decline). The Darpana (mirror) that is Bhagna fragments the Griha-swami's (householder's) Pratibimba (reflection/identity). The Ghati-yantra (clock) that has stopped indicates Kala-sthambhana (time stoppage). The Bhinna-patra (cracked vessel) indicates Dhana-kshaya (wealth decline). Remove all Bhagna-vastu from the Griha immediately.”
“The Griha shall contain no Bhagna (broken), Jirna (worn out), or Nishkriya (non-functioning) Vastu. Each such item is a Dosha-sthana (defect source) within the dwelling. The Bhagna-Darpana is the worst — it creates Rupa-bheda (image fragmentation) for all who look into it. The leaking Jala-nala (water pipe) creates Dhana-srava (wealth seepage). Repair or remove — no Bhagna-vastu shall remain.”
“The Sthapaka (architect) teaches: a Griha is a living entity. Its Vastu (objects) are its organs. A Bhagna organ weakens the whole Griha. The cracked Bhitti (wall) weakens the structure. The broken Dvara (door) weakens the boundary. The chipped Paka-patra (cooking vessel) introduces Dosha into the Ahara (food). The Griha must be maintained in Samagrata (wholeness).”
“Vishvakarma decreed: the Samagra-griha (complete/whole house) prospers. The Bhagna-griha (house of broken things) declines. Each broken item is a Chhidra (hole) through which the Griha's Bhagya (fortune) leaks. The Griha-swami who repairs promptly plugs these Chhidra. The one who ignores them watches as Bhagya flows out through each crack.”
“The Ratnakara's strongest instruction: Bhagna-vastu-mukt Griha (broken-item-free home). The five worst Bhagna-vastu: Bhagna-darpana (broken mirror), Sthira-ghati (stopped clock), Bhinna-paka-patra (cracked cooking vessel), Tuta-shayan (broken bed), and Sravat-jala-nala (leaking water pipe). These five, if present, create cumulative Dosha that no other remedy can fully counteract.”

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