Rohini is the Moon's own mansion — its place of exaltation in the wider zodiac and the nakshatra it rules. The name means "the red one" or "the ascending one," and classical texts describe it as the most beautiful and the most fertile of the twenty-seven. Brahma is its presiding deity, and the symbol — a chariot or sometimes a banyan — speaks of fullness, growth, the gathering of life.
The mythology is bittersweet. The Moon, the story goes, loved Rohini more than his other twenty-six wives, and his neglect of the rest brought him a curse. Rohini's gift is real — beauty, sensuality, the magnetic pull of being wanted — and its shadow is the same: favouritism, possessiveness, the slow drift into preferring one good thing so much that the others wilt.
People with strong Rohini placements often carry visible grace and an instinct for creation — children, art, gardens, businesses, anything that needs steady tending to bloom. They tend to know what they want and to hold it tightly when they get it.
Classical remedies emphasise letting things move. Honour the Moon through hospitality. Honour Brahma by creating something and then giving it away. The blessing of Rohini deepens when its abundance is not hoarded.
As always, this is one lens. Rohini in the moon is one signature among many. A chart is a conversation among placements, not a verdict from a single one.