By Pt. Suvrat Sharma
Mula Nakshatra presents a bent and tightened form at the tail end of Scorpius

In Vedic astrology, Mula Nakshatra marks a stage in the sky journey where the visual experience changes very clearly. After Jyeshtha, where the gaze comes to rest on a strong central point, Mula draws the viewer toward the tail end of Scorpius. In this region the sky no longer feels like a single centre. It begins to feel like a bent and tightened end. Because of this, Mula is not something the eyes experience by holding one fixed point. It is something they gradually trace.
Mula lies near the tail section of the Scorpius constellation. This is the area where the long form of the Scorpion starts to look narrower, sharper and more clearly like the end of a body. For the viewer, the experience here is not only about counting stars. It is about noticing where the main line of Scorpius finally reaches its last turn.
Mula is best understood as a compact grouping of stars near the tail of Scorpius that creates a hooked or pointed ending. The main stars in this region sit close enough that the whole area feels like one joined tip rather than a loose scattering. The overall impression is that the long line of the Scorpion is slowly narrowing down into a single sharp tail end.
A simple way for a viewer to describe this shape can be broken into a few clear ideas.
A tight end formation that resembles a hook or pointed tail tip.
A small zone that feels like the last bend of a longer body.
A pattern that seems not to expand but to contract and finish.
It can also be seen as the final curve of Scorpius in the sky, the point at which the star line bends in such a way that it looks ready to stop rather than continue.
| Feature | Experience in the sky |
|---|---|
| Location | Tail region of the Scorpius constellation |
| Shape impression | Hook like or sharp tail tip at the very end of the line |
| Structure | Close packed stars forming a compact final section |
| Overall feeling | Not expansion but gradual **completion** and narrowing |
From this summary it is clear that Mula is recognised by its curled tail end and the sense of a firm finishing point.
Earlier Nakshatras in the sequence often appear as a pair, a triangle, a box or a single strong star with a support group. Mula is different from all of these. It does not feel like one object. It feels like the end of motion.
When a viewer follows the line of Scorpius from the upper body downward, the eyes move from point to point until they arrive at the region where the stars become more compact and curved. This is where the experience of Mula begins. The gaze senses that the line is not really going further out into space. It is turning inward and then closing.
Because of this, Mula does not behave like a quiet form simply sitting in one place. It behaves like a final mark, the way a tail finds its sharp tip at the end of its path.
A simple but orderly approach works well for identifying Mula.
In city skies, many of the smaller stars may not be visible, yet if the main tail stars of Scorpius can be seen, the sense of a narrowing line that finishes is often still present. Under darker country skies, more of the tiny points appear and the full hooked outline of Mula becomes clearer and more satisfying to the eye.
Mula is interesting because it offers a very clear story in the sky. It looks like the ending point of a long journey along the body of Scorpius. The viewer experiences this region as a path that has finally reached its last knot.
For this reason, Mula stays in memory. The pattern is not remembered only as a group of stars. It is remembered as a shape that completes itself. The eye enjoys this sense of completion, because the sky pattern feels finished here, as if the Scorpion has fully drawn its tail and given the final stroke.
When viewers observe Mula with attention, their impressions usually fall into a few shared feelings.
A strong sense of having reached the very end of the Scorpius tail.
A compact region that feels sharper and more pointed than the earlier sections of the constellation.
A hooked finish that makes the entire Scorpius pattern feel complete and resolved.
This feeling of finality forms the identity of Mula in the night sky. It is not just another cluster on the way. It behaves like the ending point of the Scorpion’s track.
One short line can help fix the image of Mula firmly in the mind.
Mula looks like the hooked tail tip of Scorpius, a compact ending formation where the star pattern narrows, bends and comes to a clear finish.
Anyone who keeps this sentence in mind while tracing the Scorpius constellation will gradually find that the same hooked curve appears again and again as the signature of Mula Nakshatra.
What is the main visible sky shape of Mula Nakshatra
Mula Nakshatra appears near the tail of Scorpius as a compact hooked ending, a tight group of stars that forms a narrow, pointed tail tip rather than an open or spreading pattern.
How does the visual experience of Mula differ from that of Jyeshtha
Jyeshtha focuses on a bright central star with a small nearby support group that stops the gaze at one point, while Mula guides the eyes along the tail line of Scorpius to a hooked, finishing curve that feels like the end of a longer motion.
What is the simplest practical way to locate Mula in the night sky
First find Scorpius, then trace the main line downward along the tail until the stars look more tight and bent and stay with the section where the pattern clearly curls into a hook rather than continuing straight.
Can the hooked outline of Mula be recognised from city skies with light pollution
Sometimes yes, if the main tail stars of Scorpius are visible. Even when the faintest points are lost, the sense of a narrowing, ending line can still be felt at the lower hooked part of the constellation, although dark skies make the shape much clearer.
What is the easiest single line to remember the sky shape of Mula
It can be remembered that Mula looks like the hooked tail tip of Scorpius, a compact end where the star pattern narrows, bends and comes to a distinct finish in the night sky.
What does Nakshatra reveal about me?
My Nakshatra
Experience: 27
Consults About: Marriage, Career, Property
Clients In: Chhattisgarh, MP, Delhi, Odisha
Share this article with friends and family