For a Vedic Astrologer, making a mundane prediction is like walking barefoot on fire—there’s no reward, only burns. Yet a few astrologers with some backbone still take the plunge, daring to forecast world events while knowing full well that one wrong call could scorch their credibility.
And here’s the irony: clients don’t give a damn. You can time a flood, a cyclone, or even a political coup, and it won’t matter to them. But if you nail the month of their job change or marriage, you’re suddenly a genius. That’s what matters in the consultation room—not whether you predicted a war or a plane crash.
For skeptics, of course, mundane astrology is just free entertainment.
“Too vague.”
“Not specific enough.”
“Even I could predict that.”
“Oh, that was just a guess.”
And then there’s the evergreen accusation: “These astrologers always post their predictions after the event.”
But for a seasoned astrologer, the fire walk is worth it. It’s fun. It’s the intellectual thrill of watching how a tiny human brain can crack global events using nothing but planetary movements. As I’ve often reminded readers, astrology came before astronomy. Humans didn’t gaze at planets to measure their distance or spin equations—they watched to see how those fiery dots in the sky influenced rains, harvests, behavior, politics, and wars.
And yes—this year, some of my so-called “fire walks” landed exactly right:
• A plane crash in June 2025
• The Indo-Pak war
• The Indian economy sliding into doldrums
Want more burns, shocks, and proofs? Explore my predictions here: Mundane Astrology Predictions
And to the skeptics—“Call it vague, call it guesswork, call it nonsense. But when the next crisis hits, let’s see whether you run to your logic—or to your astrologer.”