Welcome, Child of the Moon.
The lunar tide at your birth whispered a sacred truth — your soul carries the signature of the Tritiya tithi, the 3th Lunar day during the dark fortnight.
This is your portal to remembrance.

tritiya

Krishna Paksha

  • Meet your Goddess

    Nityaklinna, meaning “eternally moist” or “always wet,” is a deeply symbolic form of the Divine Mother whose very name evokes fertility, softness, and the overflowing nature of compassion and longing.

  • The Meaning of Your Tithi

    Children of Tritiya Tithi, the third lunar day, carry the emotional signature of Goddess Nityaklinna, whose name means “eternally moist.” This sacred moisture is more than just symbolic;

  • Your sacred yantra

    This sacred yantra is not just a geometric pattern: it is a doorway, a vibrational key, a living prayer.

  • Rituals and reflections

    What should we know about the services you provide? Better descriptions result in more sales.

Goddess Nityaklinna, the eternally moist

Nityaklinna, meaning “eternally moist” or “always wet,” is a deeply symbolic form of the Divine Mother whose very name evokes fertility, softness, and the overflowing nature of compassion and longing. Her moistness is understood on multiple levels across tantric and devotional texts. On one hand, it is associated with the life-giving fluids of fertility, pointing to her role in the generative process and her connection with earthly abundance and sensual aliveness. On another, it is seen as drops of sweat, symbolizing her tireless compassion, emotional intensity, and the effort she puts forth in responding to the cries of her devotees.

In the Shri Vidya and Trika traditions, this moisture is also metaphorical for spiritual yearning, the soul’s longing to reunite with its source. It is melting in devotion, the state in which the heart weeps, not from pain, but from love so overwhelming that it dissolves the boundaries of self.

Some tantric texts even associate her with the rasa, essence that flows through the subtle body during deep spiritual or erotic experience. Thus, Nityaklinna becomes both the embodiment of mystical surrender and the inner alchemy of love and longing that moistens the soil of consciousness, making it fertile for realization.

As the presiding goddess of Tritiya tithi, she supports emotional release, inner softening, and devotional transformation. Her presence teaches that true spiritual growth doesn’t come through control or effort alone, but through the tender act of surrender, of letting ourselves be moved, touched, and transformed by love.

As the Goddess of restoration, her lunar day is considered highly auspicious for any form of renewal, whether emotional or physical, including home renovations. Renewal is also achieved through forgiveness.

She reminds us that true forgiveness is not weakness, but a profound act of strength, one that restores our confidence and reclaims our inner power.

Goddess Nityaklinna is described in the Tantrarāja as radiantly red, dressed in red garments and adorned with red sandalwood paste, her brow shimmering with beads of sweat like tiny pearls. A crescent moon rests in her crown, reflecting her deep emotional and nourishing qualities. She has four hands: in two she holds the pāśa (noose) and aṅkuśa (goad), symbolizing the control over our attachments and aversions. Her lower right hand shows abhaya mudrā, granting fearlessness, while her lower left holds a cup filled with divine nectar soma, the sweetness of spiritual love.

Nityaklinna teaches us that walking the path of love and compassion requires both bravery and softness: the strength to move past emotional conditioning and the gentleness to forgive, nourish, and heal. She is the ruler of all liquids and, depending on one’s level of awareness, her cup can represent either intoxicating pleasures or the blissful nectar of meditation. Her presence encourages us to rise above the ego’s friction and surrender to love's power, a force that transforms relationships, restores harmony, and invites us to live with openness, care, and inner grace.

The Bhagavānda Purāṇa and specific Shakta texts mention Nityāk­linnā as one of the fifteen Nityā Devīs linked to the lunar days, and describe Her as seated in Her own sacred city, Nityāk­linnāpurī. As Nityāklinnā rules over emotional surrender, yearning, and sacred eros, her city becomes the inner realm where purification through love and desire takes place. It is not just a place, but a spiritual condition or inner domain of surrender, softness, and transformation through divine longing. It's the sacred space where ego melts in love and the seeker becomes fully receptive to grace.

The energy of Goddess Nityaklinnā is soft and tender, like gentle rain falling from the heavens to nourish the parched earth. She brings soothing, emotional release, washing away hardness and resistance with Her compassion and divine moisture. Her presence evokes surrender, receptivity, and the fertile blossoming of love in the heart.

Goddess Nityaklinna reminds us that just as building a home or giving birth requires dedication and sweat, so too do our relationships need steady, conscious care. She teaches that love isn’t just a feeling, but a practice, one that asks us to show up with patience, presence, and nourishment. On Her day, She encourages us to soften, to tend gently to the bonds we share, even when discomfort or tension arises, and to choose love not only in ease, but also in effort.

She is often invoked to protect and nurture bonds between those who love one another. She encourages affection not only in action, but also in thought and speech, fostering deeper emotional connection. Her blessings bring unity, helping to harmonize relationships, especially between parents and children, and to awaken mutual respect, understanding, and heartfelt support.

Meaning of your lunar day

Children of Tritiya Tithi, the third lunar day, carry the emotional signature of Goddess Nityaklinna, whose name means “eternally moist.” This sacred moisture is more than just symbolic; it represents the life-sustaining, emotionally rich, and deeply receptive nature of this lunar day. Just like Nityaklinna, whose energy flows like rain to nourish the dry earth, Tritiya natives are inherently compassionate, nurturing, and responsive to the needs of others. They embody the principle of seva, selfless service, often offering their energy, care, and even tears for those they love.

These individuals are highly intuitive, emotionally sensitive, and physically flexible, their bodies and minds often reflect the water element that governs their tithi. They can move with life’s currents gracefully, adapting quickly, emotionally attuning to environments, and often sensing undercurrents that others miss. This also makes them very effective healers, caregivers, and artists, they know how to soften the hard edges of others and bring emotional connection where there is none.

Yet, like the sweat glistening on the Goddess’s brow, Tritiya natives are no strangers to effort. They are doers, quietly tenacious, able to carry great emotional and physical burdens when needed. Like mothers in the wild, they can be fiercely protective, strong, and enduring when it comes to defending those they love or the values they hold dear. Their strength, however, is rarely loud or confrontational, it is subtle, consistent, and deeply committed.

But this watery strength comes with challenges. Emotional reactivity is often their greatest hurdle. Tritiya natives tend to take things very personally, and their emotional world can become overwhelmed by drama, criticism, or rejection. A harsh word can linger in their heart for days, and perceived slights can become emotional wounds. This is where Goddess Nityaklinna’s symbolism becomes key: Her pasha (noose) and ankusha (goad) remind us of the importance of mastering our attractions and aversions, the constant push and pull of desire and resistance that rule the emotional body. Tritiya natives must learn this inner discipline, or else they risk being swept away by the tides of their own feelings.

Furthermore, Goddess Nityaklinna holds a cup of soma, the nectar of divine sweetness. For the Tritiya native, this represents the potential to cultivate inner joy, emotional nourishment, and compassion without expectation, to love simply because they can, not because they must. But to reach this level, they must stop relying on external validation and instead source emotional fulfillment from within.

Tritiya Tithi is also closely connected to relationships, especially the nurturing dynamics within family and romantic bonds. On a spiritual level, these natives often feel called to restore harmony and bring people closer. However, they must avoid becoming emotionally co-dependent, giving too much and losing themselves in the process. Nityaklinna teaches that true nourishment requires boundaries, she offers compassion, but not at the cost of her own power.

In essence, Tritiya natives are here to learn how to love with strength, to serve without martyrdom, and to be soft without collapsing. When balanced, they are among the most healing and harmonizing energies of the lunar cycle, they carry within them the sacred rain that restores life, and the emotional intelligence to heal both themselves and others. But this only unfolds when they learn not to drown in their own depths, but to float gently on the surface of their emotional waters, with self-awareness and grace.

famous tritiya natives

Anandamayi Ma

She was known for her overflowing love, compassion, and maternal energy. Her presence brought emotional healing and peace to countless people, much like the rain revives the earth. She often wept spontaneously in devotion or while sensing others' suffering, a pure expression of divine empathy. Like Goddess Nityaklinna, she reminded her followers that true love requires effort and inner mastery.

Pablo Picasso

Like Goddess Nityaklinna, Picasso embodied a creative force that flowed endlessly, reshaping form and emotion like water itself. His art, like her sacred moisture, nourished the world with depth and beauty while often reflecting deep inner turbulence. Just as Nityaklinna holds both compassion and intensity, Picasso’s works swung between love and rebellion, order and chaos. His emotional vulnerability gave rise to unmatched artistic fluidity and bold reinvention. In him, the Tritiya tithi’s power to feel, transform, and express came fully alive.