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How an Instagram Influencer Used ShreeKundli's Prashna to Time Her Cyber Crime Complaint — Ex Arrested in 3 Weeks

| | 7 min read
Name Kavya Nair
Age 27
City Bangalore, KA
Occupation Instagram Content Creator

When Your Feed Becomes a Weapon Against You

Kavya Nair had spent three years building her Instagram presence from zero to fifty thousand followers. She was not a glamour influencer. Her niche was Bangalore street food — tiny darshini joints, secret biryani spots, the seventy-year-old filter coffee uncle in Basavanagudi. Brands paid her for honest reviews. Followers trusted her because she never promoted anything she had not eaten herself, and she always tagged the price. It was a modest but genuine livelihood that she had built alongside her graphic design freelancing.

Then in October 2025, the fake accounts appeared. Three Instagram profiles, all created within the same week, began posting doctored screenshots and fabricated stories about Kavya. The claims were vicious — that she accepted bribes from restaurants for positive reviews, that her follower count was bought, that she had plagiarized content from smaller creators. One post included a photoshopped conversation that made it look like Kavya was mocking a restaurant owner's appearance.

Within forty-eight hours, the posts had been shared widely in Bangalore foodie circles. Three brand collaborations were put on hold. Two restaurant owners called her to ask if the screenshots were real. A food blogger she admired publicly distanced herself. Kavya lost two thousand followers in a week — not a catastrophic number, but in a niche community where trust is everything, the damage was disproportionate.

It took Kavya ten days to trace the accounts back to her ex-boyfriend — a man she had dated for two years and broken up with eight months earlier. The breakup had been her decision. He had not taken it well.

A Prashna Chart with a Clear Verdict

Kavya's roommate Priya was a regular ShreeKundli user and suggested she try Prashna before deciding on a course of action. Kavya's question was precise: "Should I file a cyber crime complaint against my ex for defamation?"

The Prashna chart was unusually decisive. The 6th lord — representing enemies, litigation, and adversaries — was extremely strong, which in Prashna astrology means the enemy has been aggressive and visible, but also that legal action against them would be potent. Rahu, the planet associated with digital activity, deception, and anonymous online behavior, was placed in the enemy's house — confirming that the adversary was operating through digital deception. The Ascendant lord was strong and unafflicted, indicating that the querent's position was legitimate and would be validated.

Prashna Chart Findings

6th Lord: Extremely strong — enemy is active but exposed. Legal action is strongly favored.
Rahu Placement: In the 6th house — digital deception by the adversary confirmed. The perpetrator will be identifiable and punishable.
Recommendation: File during Mars antardasha (courage, decisive action) on a Tuesday (Mars's day) for maximum legal force. Surya mantra recommended for reputation recovery.

"I had evidence, but I was scared. Scared of retaliation, scared of the process, scared of being public about something so humiliating. The Prashna chart did not remove the fear. It told me the fear was unfounded — my position was strong, his was exposed. That was enough to make me act."
— Kavya Nair

Mars Antardasha, Tuesday, Cyber Cell

ShreeKundli's recommendation was specific about timing. Mars antardasha was already active in Kavya's dasha sequence — Mars represents courage, decisiveness, and the warrior energy needed to confront aggressors. The platform recommended filing the complaint on a Tuesday, Mars's ruling day, during the morning hours when Mars energy is strongest. This was not superstition dressed as strategy; in Vedic thought, aligning significant actions with their ruling planet amplifies the native's resolve and the action's effectiveness.

Kavya spent the week before the filing date building her case meticulously. She compiled every fake post with archived links. She gathered metadata showing the fake accounts were created from IP ranges consistent with her ex's area in Koramangala. She obtained written statements from two restaurant owners confirming the screenshots were fabricated. She consulted a cyber law specialist in Indiranagar who helped her draft the complaint under IT Act Section 66C (identity theft) and Section 67 (publishing obscene material electronically).

On Tuesday morning, November 18, 2025, Kavya walked into the Bangalore Cyber Crime Police Station on Infantry Road at 10 AM. She submitted her complaint with forty-two pages of documentation. The officer on duty later told her it was one of the most organized complaints he had received from an individual.

Three Weeks to Arrest, Three Months to Restoration

The cyber cell moved faster than Kavya expected. The fake accounts were traced within a week — her ex had used a VPN but had logged in once from his office Wi-Fi, which the police subpoenaed. He was arrested on a Saturday morning, twenty-two days after Kavya filed her complaint. The charges included criminal defamation, identity theft, and harassment under the IT Act. He was released on bail but with conditions that included no contact with Kavya and no social media activity pending trial.

Kavya also followed ShreeKundli's remedy recommendation: reciting Surya Beej Mantra daily for reputation recovery. The Sun governs public image, authority, and the power to be seen clearly. She began the practice the day after filing the complaint — eleven recitations each morning, facing east, before checking her phone. She says the ritual grounded her during the weeks when her DMs were still flooded with questions and doubt.

Over the following three months, Kavya methodically rebuilt. She posted a single, calm, factual story explaining what had happened — no dramatics, just receipts. The food blogger who had distanced herself publicly apologized. All three brand deals returned. By February 2026, her follower count had not only recovered but surpassed the original number. She hit sixty thousand in March.

"The timing mattered more than I expected. Filing on that specific Tuesday during Mars antardasha — I do not know if Mars made the police faster, but I know that choosing a day with intention made me walk in there like I owned the room. And I did."
— Kavya Nair

Disclaimer: This is a real user story shared with consent. Names and identifying details have been changed for privacy. Astrological guidance is for informational purposes and should complement, not replace, professional legal advice. If you are experiencing online harassment, contact your local cyber crime cell. Individual results may vary. ShreeKundli does not guarantee specific life outcomes.