Paush Amavasya 2025: Do These Most Powerful Rituals For Closure On The Final Amavasya Of The Year

19 December 2025 marks the final Amavasya of the year, falling in the sacred month of Paush, a period traditionally associated with ancestral remembrance and spiritual cleansing in the Hindu lunar calendar. Paush Amavasya is observed as an important day for tarpan, daan, and ritual bathing, with the belief that honouring ancestors on this day helps release inherited burdens, restore balance in family life, and invite peace and stability into the home. It is often referred to as Chhota Pitru Paksha, highlighting its role in addressing ancestral karma outside the main Pitru Paksha period.

Photo Credit: Oneindia

Set against this deeper cultural and spiritual backdrop, tarot reader Samiksha describes the Paush Amavasya of 2025 as one of the most potent energetic windows of the year. Beyond tradition, she views this New Moon as a powerful moment for emotional release, ancestral healing, and resetting personal energy before stepping into a new cycle.If 2025 has felt heavy or stuck in familiar loops, this Amavasya offers a chance to release what has been weighing you down, allowing the year to close with clarity instead of carryover.

The Most Powerful Time Window

Samiksha recommends performing these rituals during Sandhya Kaal, between 6:00 PM and 9:00 PM on 19 December. This twilight period is considered ideal for spiritual work because it sits between endings and beginnings exactly what this Amavasya represents. If evenings aren't possible, you can also light a diya after your morning bath and regular puja as a supplementary step. The core ritual, however, works best after sunset.

The Negativity Burner Diya: Simple But Intentional

Before placing your diyas, prepare a small mix for your main diya:

  • One clove
  • One piece of camphor
  • A pinch of turmeric

This combination is believed to cleanse the space energetically while inviting Lakshmi energy-calm, stability, and flow into the home.

Ancestor Offering: A Serene Act Of Respect

For ancestral blessings, use:

  • Til oil or cow's ghee
  • Black sesame seeds
  • Unbroken rice (akshat)
  • White or yellow flowers

This offering is about acknowledgment, taking a moment to recognise what came before you and asking for guidance rather than control.

Where To Place Diyas And What Each One Supports

In Your Home Temple

  • Fuel: Pure ghee
  • Focus: Wealth flow, intuition, and inner stability

This is the energetic centre of the house. Lighting a diya here anchors the ritual spiritually and sets the tone for the rest.

Outside The Main Entrance

  • Fuel: Sesame oil (til ka tel)
  • Focus: Protection from the evil eye, debts, and energetic interference

Make sure the flame faces towards the inside of the house, symbolising positivity entering rather than leaving.

Beside The Tulsi Plant

  • Fuel: Ghee
  • Focus: Balancing Rahu and Ketu influences, restoring harmony

Chant "Om Namah Bhagwate Vasudevay Namah" 11 times here. This step centres the family's emotional and spiritual health.

Under A Peepal Or Banyan Tree

  • Fuel: Mustard oil
  • Focus: Pitra Dosh remedies and releasing blocked ancestral blessings

Place the diya gently at the base of the tree. Avoid touching the tree, this act is meant to be reverent, not intrusive.

Mantras That Anchor The Ritual

Once all diyas are lit, chant one of the following 108 times, choose the mantra that feels natural to you:

  • "Om Namah Shivaya"
  • "Om Shreem Mahalakshmyai Namah"

The North-Facing Wish

To close the ritual, stand facing North and repeat this affirmation three times:

"Whatever negativity, obstacles, and fears are blocking my progress, let them dissolve tonight. Bless me with light, clarity, abundance, and positive beginnings."

Say it slowly. Let it land.

Closing The Year With Purpose, Not Pressure

Paush Amavasya on 19 December 2025 isn't about fixing everything before the year ends. It's about honesty-acknowledging what didn't work, what stayed unresolved, and what deserves to be released. When done with awareness rather than fear, these rituals become less about superstition and more about closure.