பல்லி விழும் பலன்கள்
(Lizard Astrology)
பல்லி எந்த உறுப்பில் விழுகிறது என்பதில் அடிப்படையாக பழமையான தமிழ் நம்பிக்கைகள் அடிக்கடி பலன்களாக சொல்லப்படுகின்றன.
| உறுப்பு | வலம் | இடம் |
|---|---|---|
| தலை | கலகம் | துன்பம் |
| நெற்றி | லட்சுமிகரம் | காரியசித்தி |
| கண் | சுகம் | சிறையயம் |
| காது | ஆயுள் | லாபம் |
| மார்பு | தனலாபம் | சுகம் |
| கை | துக்கம் | துன்பம் |
| மணிக்கட்டு | பீடை | கீர்த்தி |
| வயிறு | தானியம் | மகிழ்ச்சி |
| தொடை | துக்கம் | சஞ்சலம் |
| முழங்கால் | நஷ்டம் | பந்தனம் |
| கணைக்கால் | பிரயாணம் | சுகம் |
| பாதம் | நோய் | துக்கம் |
பரிகாரம் : உச்சந்தலையில் பசும்பால் வைத்தல் நலம்
Cultural Belief • Palli Vilum Palangal
Lizard Astrology (Palli Vilum Palangal) — A Traditional Tamil Guide
Palli vilum palangal refers to the age-old Tamil belief that the appearance, movement, sound, or accidental touch/fall of a lizard can indicate good or cautionary signs. Families across Tamil Nadu and in Tamil communities worldwide have preserved these interpretations through oral tradition and almanacs. While many treat them as gentle signals that invite mindfulness, remember these are cultural beliefs—not scientific predictions.
1) Where it touches or falls
Traditional lists map meanings to the part of the body involved. A touch near the head is commonly linked with responsibility, recognition, or upcoming decisions; the right side is often read as favorable for initiatives, travel, or gains; the left side can be interpreted as a caution to plan carefully and avoid impulsive expenses. These are broad folk readings—customs vary by family and region.
2) Where it appears at home
Sightings in the pooja room or near a lit lamp are usually taken as auspicious; at the threshold/door, people see it as news arriving or guests coming; in the kitchen/storage, elders may read it as a cue to manage food, cleanliness, or budgeting. Bedrooms and study spaces are sometimes read as reminders to improve routine, rest, or focus.
3) Direction and movement
In many traditions, a lizard moving towards the East or North is considered favorable, while West or South may be treated as a caution to recheck plans. If it crosses the threshold from outside to inside, some see it as new opportunities; going the other way is read as finishing or letting go of something. Again, treat these as soft pointers, not fixed rules.
4) Time and weekday
Folk guides often mark dawn/forenoon as positive and late evening/night as times to avoid hasty decisions. Thursday/Friday are viewed kindly in many homes, whereas Tuesday/Saturday can be tagged “handle with care.” Align with your family’s tradition if it differs.
5) Sound (chirp)
A clear, sudden chirp near the door or while thinking of someone is commonly read as incoming news or confirmation; multiple chirps are sometimes read as “pay attention” to details you might be missing.
What to do (practical approach)
Stay calm and compassionate—do not harm lizards; they help control insects.
Offer a short prayer or light a lamp if that’s your practice.
Use the sighting as a reminder to organize finances, recheck plans, and communicate clearly.
If you feel uneasy, simple remedies like charity (annadhanam), feeding birds, or reading a sloka are traditional ways to restore confidence.
Keep the home clean and ventilated; cover food and ensure safe, hygienic handling if a lizard strays indoors.
Gentle reminder
Palli vilum palangal is part of our Tamil cultural heritage. Enjoy these meanings as reflective cues—but make life decisions using practical planning, good counsel, and faith.