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Planet chakra, chakra astrology, planetary chakra balance, Shadbala

Planetary chakra balance: your strengths, through a chakra lens

The seven classical planets and the seven chakras have long been paired in yogic tradition. We take that pairing seriously — and honestly. The strengths here are your real computed Shadbala; the chakra mapping is a reflective lens laid over them, not a classical calculation.

What we are actually computing

Shadbala is the six-fold measure of planetary strength in Jyotish, expressed in units called rupas. It is fully deterministic — positional, directional, temporal, motional and aspectual strength combined. PI computes Shadbala for all seven planets from your exact chart. That part is hard astronomy and classical formula, not interpretation.

The correspondence, stated plainly

The mapping of planets to chakras — Mars to the root, Venus to the sacral, the Sun to the solar plexus, the Moon to the heart, Mercury to the throat, Jupiter to the third eye, Saturn to the crown — comes from the yogic and tantric tradition, not from the classical Jyotish texts. There are several such schemes, and we use one consistent version. This is the honest part most "chakra astrology" tools skip: the energy chakras are not something a horoscope engine computes. We are placing a real measurement under a traditional symbol.

Why it is still useful

Held as a lens rather than a verdict, the result is genuinely informative. A strong planet lends vitality to the theme its chakra governs; a weak one points to where attention, practice or remedy may help. Because the underlying numbers are real, the picture is consistent and personal — not a generic by-sign chakra reading.

How PI shows your chakra balance

PI maps each planet's computed Shadbala onto its corresponding chakra and shows the balance across all seven, with the strongest and weakest highlighted. The label on every screen makes the boundary clear: real strengths, traditional lens. You can then ask the AI to reflect on the pattern.