“Shubh muhurat.” “Auspicious date for marriage.” “Good time to start a business.” These searches spike around every big decision, because somewhere we all know the truth: when you act matters almost as much as what you do. Timing astrology turns that instinct into something you can actually use.
Muhurat — the right moment, computed
Muhurat is the Vedic practice of choosing an auspicious moment to begin something important — a wedding, a business, a move, a medical procedure, a major purchase. Its honest purpose isn’t magic; it’s reducing friction. The right moment tilts conditions in your favour so the same effort meets less resistance.
Anvaya computes muhurat for the decisions that actually matter — medical, business, home, and partnership — and scopes it to what you’re doing, because the day that’s perfect for signing a deal can be the wrong grain for a hard conversation.
The daily score — your day’s grain
Your daily score is a chart-grounded read on today — not a generic horoscope shared by a twelfth of the planet, but a read computed from your chart, for your day. It tells you the grain of the next twenty-four hours: strong for outreach and starts, perhaps, and soft for confrontation. And because it’s grounded in your real chart, you can share it — and use it to rate us back, so your Atlas keeps getting sharper.
A horoscope tells everyone the same weather. Your daily score reads the sky above your house.
Watch windows — the dates worth watching
Beyond today, your Atlas surfaces watch windows — the upcoming stretches that matter most for you. The seasons that favour a leap, the windows that ask for care, the timing of your most important themes. Instead of being blindsided by a hard month or missing an open one, you see it coming and prepare.
Daily practice — small alignment, compounded
Big timing decisions are rare; days are not. Daily practice is the small, repeatable habit of checking your grain and aligning to it — a minute of orientation that, compounded over a year, quietly changes how a life feels. Not superstition. Just the discipline of stopping yourself from spending your best self on the day least able to receive it.
“Daily horoscope” vs a chart-grounded read
This is the honest difference. A daily horoscope is entertainment — vague by necessity, true of millions. A chart-grounded daily read is yours, computed and scoped to you, and — because Anvaya calibrates — tested against whether its past reads actually matched your life. One is a fortune cookie. The other is an instrument.
How Anvaya helps
Anvaya brings muhurat, your daily score, your watch windows, and a daily practice into one place — each grounded in your real chart and sharpened by calibration. It won’t make you lucky. It’ll do something better and quieter: help you stop fighting closed days and start walking through open ones. (For the deeper philosophy of beginnings, see when is a good time to start.)

