I didn't come to Vedic astrology as an intellectual pursuit. I came because the same questions kept repeating in my own life, and conventional answers stopped working.
Loss, prolonged uncertainty, and periods of internal conflict shaped important phases of my life. Decisions felt heavier than situations warranted. Relationships carried familiar tensions despite changing circumstances. I kept wondering: why does this keep happening?
Astrology entered my life not as belief or escape, but as a way to understand why similar situations kept resurfacing, why timing mattered more than effort in certain phases, and why some problems resolved only when approached differently. What I found wasn't vague symbolism. It was a rigorous framework that explained patterns I had already lived through, including their timing.
Modern life has removed many buffers that once helped people course-correct early. Families are smaller. Support systems are fragmented. Patterns that once resolved quietly now accumulate into burnout or breakdown. Vedic astrology offers early visibility into these patterns, so action can be taken before crisis becomes inevitable.
I Read Space grew from this lived confrontation with repetition, uncertainty, and the search for clarity that holds up under pressure.
