Rhythm — cyclical living.
A working calendar set to the moon and the slower planetary turns, so your week is shaped by season, not by inbox.
Luna Mantra is a quiet study of Vedic astrology and tarot for adults who have done the therapy, read the books, and outgrown the horoscope. Cyclical living, shadow work, and an honest reframe of work and money — without the marigold.
Luna Mantra is a study, a calendar, and a small, careful library — built for people who take their inner life as seriously as their work.
It is not a prediction service, a personality test, or a horoscope. It will not tell you whether to take the meeting. It will help you notice the season you are in, the shadow you are circling, and the question you are actually asking.
A working calendar set to the moon and the slower planetary turns, so your week is shaped by season, not by inbox.
Astrology and tarot used as mirrors, not oracles — a slow, unflinching look at the parts of you that have been running the show.
Ambition, labour, and money examined through a spiritual-but-grounded lens. No abundance scripts. No bypassing.
A free, written reading of your sidereal chart — not a generated PDF, not a sun-sign blurb. A composed letter, sent within five days, that you will actually keep.
A linen-bound monthly book, beeswax taper, and cedar smoke — to mark the dark of the moon properly.
A sixty-minute private reading for the years Saturn comes back to your chart. One of the most clarifying hours you will buy.
A guided journal pairing the Major Arcana with prompts written by therapists. Slow work; the only kind that holds.
A monthly delivery — ritual book, audio guide, and a single object — calibrated to the lunation ahead.
For readers who want the practice on a calendar, not in their feed. Two written deliveries a week, one longer letter a month, and a working library that grows.
I started Luna Mantra in the third year of my Saturn return, after a decade of running too fast for an industry I had stopped believing in. I wanted somewhere to put the older traditions — the Vedic chart I had grown up around, the tarot I had taken seriously in my twenties — without the costume.
This is the practice I needed and could not find: literate, slow, unembarrassed. If you are tired of being sold answers, you may like it here.
What it costs to ignore the body's quiet "no" — and a small, practical case for treating the lunation as a working unit, not a mood.
Read the essayAn attempt to retire the most misread card in the deck — and what it tends to mean when it shows up for senior people in the middle of a quiet year.
Read the essayA short reading for the high-functioning client who has confused earning with safety. Without the abundance script.
Read the essayThe first piece of writing about astrology I have forwarded to my therapist. It said something about my Saturn return that two years of work had been circling.
I came in skeptical and left with a reading list. Six months later, the framing of "rhythm, depth, reframe" is the closest thing I have to a personal operating manual.
It does the rare thing — takes the tradition seriously and takes me seriously, in the same paragraph. I read the Sunday Letter before email.
A short essay tied to the week's lunation, a single tarot pull, and one question to bring to the rest of your week. Free. Slower than the rest of your inbox.