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Rubber
tubing lies passively and lets liquid flow through it. Your arteries, on the
other hand, respond to everything that happens to you, and their responses
have to be both active and intelligent. In biology textbooks, we get the idea
that a cell divides again and again until its time is up, after about fifty
divisions, at which point it dies. But this is a drastically simplified, even a
false view. A cell has experien ces. It remembers what happens to it. It is
capable of losing its skills if links in its innate knowledge are lost or
damaged. By the same token, a cell could be new all the time, without decay ,
if it preserved its complete store of intelligence. The difference between life
and death for a cell lies in its smriti , or memory . If you take the longest
perspective, a perfect memory in a cell would lead to immortality , for there
can be no death as long as renewal continues without flaws or mistakes. Science has never proved that DNA is limited in its ability to run a cell in
good working order . Each of your arteries contains the same DNA that
formed the arteries in Stone Age humans fifty thousand years ago. If DNA
can manage to make perfect arteries for five hundred centuri es, each one
containing milli ons of perfectly operating cells, there is no intrinsic reason
why your DNA should botch the job after sixty years. But the botching takes place, and in a lot fewer than sixty years. By age
12, a typical artery changes markedly in appearance. It begins to develop
irregularities in the form of yellow fatty streaks. At the microscopic level,one finds that these irregularitie s started as a result of tiny, nearly invisible
cracks on the inside of the arterial wall. A cell biologist can look at one cell
from such an artery and see the indisputable signs of age. Over the next five
decades, the signs become obvious even to a layman. If you were attending
open-chest surgery and touched a piece of old aorta, the major artery leading
from the heart, it would feel like a stiff pipe (often as stiff as bone, if
arteriosclerosis has advanced far enough). Inside, it would be riddled with
fatty pockets called plaque. You would have no trouble seeing that a terrible
mistake has been made somewhere. How does one close the gap between one reality—the immortality of
DNA—and another—the frail life span of a human being? In fact the two
realities are very close. There is no physical distance between us and our
DNA. There is only a gap that exists in the nonphysical realm of knowledge. As I have made abundantly clear by now, Ayurveda makes a shift away
from the idea of the cell as a physical package of molecules, adopting
instead the idea of the cell as a package of knowledge. As the illustration
below indicates , knowledge is dynamic. It is not packaged inertly , but in
living form, as the constant interplay of three elements. To have living knowledge, there must be a knower , an object that it
knows, and the process of knowing that connects the two. The Vedic terms
for this basic triad are rishi (knower), devata (process of knowing), and
chhandas (object of knowledge)—taken together , they form the totality of
knowing, or Samhita , the undivided state of pure awareness. The humanmind, then, is a three-in-one creation. A human body requires the same
simple ingredients, repeated countless times at different levels of the
physiology . You are a knower , your body is the object you form with your
knowledge, and the millions of cellular functions taking place inside you are
the process of knowing. DNA too is a knower , but on a different scale,
parceling out its knowledge in the form of biochemicals. On yet another
scale, a red blood corpuscle is a knower , knowing how to attach itself to
oxygen atoms for transport to all other cells in the body . This threefold model of knowle dge enables us to see how one thing—our
inner intelligence—diversifies itself into endless combinations of things. Your 50 trillion cells, bound together as a community by hundreds of
enzymes, proteins, peptides, amino acids, et cetera, represent an incredible
display of one becoming many . Yet it is dangerous to get lost in the display . The “mistake of the intellect” occurs when the mind forgets its real source—
the one intelligence flowing through every cell—and becomes hopelessly
lost in the many . To prove that this is not just a philosophical point, let’s turn
to some groundbreaking experiments that demonstrate a startlingly simple
solution to the aging process. To understand these experiment s, we need a
little background in physiology . Chronological age (how old you are according to your birth certificate) is
one way to measure the aging process, but not the most accurate one, since
people vary widely in how their bodies change over time. Physiologists
therefore refer to a second measure, called biological age, which measures
the actual rate of aging in a person’ s cells, tissues, and organ systems. Chronological age matches biological age only when you are young. Two
healthy 20-year -olds are likely to look almost identical if you compare their
hearts, livers, skin, eyesight, and so on. But after middle age no two people
have aged the same. Two 70-year -olds present drastically different profiles:
one has arthritis, the other heart disease; one is myopic, the other not; and so
on. This means that biologi cal aging, though an accurate measure
theoretically , is difficult to pin down, short of looking at every organ in the
body . Fortunatel y, there are accepted ways to measure biological age, which
include such things as near-point vision, acuity of hearing, and systolic
blood pressure (the pressure in the blood vessels when the heart is pumping).These biologica l markers of aging usually deteriorate steadil y over time;
therefore, they give a reliable approximation of the biological age of the
whole body at a given chronological age. Several years ago a team of researchers made the exciting discovery that
the biological markers of aging can be retarded or even reversed through
meditation. The research was headed by Dr. R. Keith Wallace, a physiologist
who studied eighty-four meditat ors with an average chronological age of 53. He divided his subjects into two groups according to how long they had been
regularly practic ing meditation. One group had meditated for at least five
years, the other for fewer than five years. Wallace found that meditation made his subjects biologically younger than
their years, and by a considerable amount: the short-term meditators were
five years younger than their chronological age, the long-term meditators a
full twelve years younger . In other words, a woman of 60 who had been
practicing medit ation for at least five years would typically have the body of
a 48-year -old, biologically speaking. (This does not include cosmetic
changes in skin and hair, although many of the subjects did have strikingly
youthful appear ances.) These results did not depend on any other factor;
people were screened for diet, exercise, and other habits. Interestingly , the
controls revealed that not eating red meat was correlated with a slightly
younger biological age, in keeping with various findings on the longer life
span of vegetarians. Wallace’ s findings were unprecedented at the time. Follow-up studies
were soon cond ucted in England that confirmed his research. In one group,
meditators were seven years younger in their biological age. When the same
people were measured a year and a half later, they scored a further drop of
one and a half years, implying that a year of meditation takes off a year of
biological age. More recently , Dr. Jay Glaser , a physician with a strong background in
meditation, decided to pursue one of the naturally occurring chemicals in our
bodies that may be connected with longevity . He measured the level of an
adrenal hormon e called DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) in meditators. Although the precise function of this hormone remains mysterious, it isknown that DHEA reaches its highest levels at around age 25 and then
declines in almost a straight line, year by year, until by age 70 only 5 percent
of it remains. Initial enthusiasm over DHEA developed when it was injected
in large doses into laboratory animals and showed striking anti-aging
properties. Older animals showed renewed vigor , improve d immunity ,
increased muscle tone, and better memory . Glaser found that levels of DHEA were significantly higher in all ages of
meditators compared to a matched group of nonmeditators. This was true for
both men and women, with the biggest difference showing up in the oldest
subjects. For example, Glaser found that the older meditators had the same
DHEA as nonmeditators five to ten years younger . He interpreted these
finding to sugge st that meditation somehow increases the natural production
of this interesting hormone. Researchers have studied the effects of giving DHEA to people with
mixed results. Although experiments with DHEA have shown that it causes
changes in hormonal levels and may improve people’ s mood, it has not yet
been found to have the same convincing benefits on memory or vitality in
humans as it does in animals. Still, it is intriguing that a simple mental
meditation technique can induce changes in a hormone that seems to play a
role in the aging process. This biochemical clue gives support to the
experience of people meditating who often report that they feel mentally and
physically younger . RASA YANAS—HERBS FOR LONGEVITY
Herbs are an immense part of Ayurvedic medicine that we have not yet
touched on. Many thousands of medicinal herbs are prescribed in Ayurveda,
and experienced Ayurvedic doctors often include herbs as part of their
treatment. This is because herbs are not the same as drugs, but are more
general and milder in effect. The simplest way to view herbs is as
concentrated food. One of the ways in which herbs are traditionally
classified is according to taste, using the six rasas—sweet, sour, salty, bitter ,
pungent, and astringent—that apply to food.However , herbs are more potent and specific in their action. A bitter herb
like quinine can bring Pitta down promptly , making it useful for reducing
fever and inflammation. A pungent chili can instantly drain excess mucus as
it reduces Kapha. An astringent spice like turmeric can dry the phlegm in a
sore throat in a matter of minutes. In the section on diet in part III, I give
some of the common household herbs that can be used at home to balance
your doshas. Using herbs in combination with food is a safe approach. For treating disease, stronger herbs are employed, which need to be
medically supervised. In our Center we use specific herbs in the context of a
holistic approac h. Ayurvedic herbs are usually taken from the whole plant,
which reduces the possibility of harmful side effects. The principle here is
that the herb’ s active ingredient is packaged in the plant with other chemicals
that buffer it, offsetting its possible undesirable actions. In other words, in
Ayurveda the whole plant is part of nature’ s pharmacy . In Western medicine,
however , only the active ingredient is regarded as useful. HOW AYUR VEDIC HERBS WORK
As they apply to longevity , the Ayurvedic texts list some special herbs,
alone or in combination, that are classified as rasayana . The word loosely
translates as “nourishing the essence of life.” Rasayanas are not youth
potions, they are correctives for loss of memory in the cells. Each herb is a
packet of vibrations that specifically matches a vibration in the quantum
mechanical body . The liver, for example, is built up from a specific sequence of vibrations at
the quan tum level. In the case of liver malfunction, some disru ption of the
proper sequence in these vibrations is at fault. According to Ayurveda, an
herb exists with this exact same sequence, and when applied, it restores the
liver’s functioning. The principle at work here is called complementarity . Complementarity
holds that “nature thinks everywhere alike,” a Vedic slogan that means that
nature uses the same materials when making plants, minerals, mantras, or
human bodies. These are not just similar molecules (although it is the samecarbon that goes into coal, diamonds, sugar , and blood). What is more basic
still are the subtle vibrations that hold molecules together; these are the real
building blocks of nature, according to the Vedic sages. They are so
universal that seemingly unrelated things, such as a Sanskrit word and a bay
leaf, can be considered kindred, if you know how to look deep enough. Because there is likeness everywhere in nature, an Ayurvedic doctor looks
upon herbs, primordial sounds, gemstones, colors, aromas, and foods as
equally fit to act as medicine. As used in Ayurveda, herbs do not have the
same effect on the body that Western medicines do. Our drugs kill pain,
relax muscles, replace deficien t insulin or thyroid hormone, and so on;
rasayanas introduce a subtle signal into the physiology— they “talk” to the
doshas and directly influence the flow of inner intelligence. Rasayanas are closely associate d with Indian food and therefor e are sold
in the United States as herbal food supplements, not medicine. Some sweet
fruits, such as Indian gooseberry (called amla or amalaki ), are considered
extremely good rasayanas. (In fact, this particular fruit forms the basis of
most of the health tonics that have been taken since ancestral times in India
as ginse ng is taken in China.) To anyone interested in medicinal herbs, the
lore of rasayana is fascinating, but also extremely complex. Dozens of plants
are said to be capable of rejuvenating the body . Among those that have
common names in Western herbalism:
Gotu kola and garlic are specifics for Vata
Aloe vera and saf fron are specifics for Pitta
Elecampane and honey are specifics for Kapha (although not an herb,
honey is considered the shukra , or purest essence, of the plant world). But this list does not include the most powerful rasayanas, which only
have Indian names, among them amla , guggul , shatavari, and ashwaghanda . What makes rasayanas comple x is not just their reliance on fruits and
herbs. To extract the desired effect from an ingredient, one must know when
to pick it, how long to cook it and by what method, and in what proportion toblend it with other herbs. The recipe for a single rasayana may call for fifty
ingredients, each of which must be carefully blended. HERBAL REJUVENA TIVES
After several years of investigation and trial, we feel that rasayana is a
valuable field. It has yielded a few authentic formulas that have been re-
created from the ancient recipe s. Although rasayanas have been used for
thousands of years by Ayurvedic physicians to enhance energy and
immunity , we are only beginn ing to scientifically research the purported
health benefits of these herbal compounds. Regulations governing herbs in
this coun try permit the distribution of rasayanas as an adjunct to diet only; as
such we recomm end them for general use. No health claims are made for
them nor are they to be used as medicine. (If you have been diagnosed with a
specific illness, please do not take these or any other herbs without first
consulting a physician trained in Ayurveda.) Among the best known rasayanas is Chavanprash , based upon the fruit
Indian gooseberry . This fruit, which is one of the highest natural sources of
vitamin C, is known as Amla or Dhatri in Sansk rit, whic h means having the
healing qualitie s of a nurse or mother . It has been classically used as a
rejuvenative for the blood, heart, lungs, and reproductive tissues. We have
formulated a modern version of Chavanprash known as Biochavan . Another important classical Ayurvedic rasayana is Brahmi Rasayana ,
based upon the herb gotu kola. It is traditionally used as a revitalizer for the
brain and nervo us system. It is said to both calm restlessness and enhance
awareness. Intrigued by the vast classical Ayurvedic literature on rasayanas,
researchers have undertaken studies in this country and Europe to determine
what pharmacological actions these preparations have. The ingredients in
these rasayanas seem to have potent antioxidant effects and may also inhibit
the blood clotting cascade that is associated with the release of stress
hormones.Although it is clearly too early to extrapolate these studies on animals to
humans, it is encouraging that these ancient natural herbal compounds are
now receiving serious scientific attention. Ongoing research should help to
clarify the role that these form ulas can play in maintaining health and
reversing disease. The explanations offered for the potential benefits suggested by
preliminary studies point to the possible role of free radical chemicals in a
wide range of diseases. Free radicals are undesirable peroxides that have
long been implic ated in hastening the aging process; one of the main reasons
for the popula rity of vitamins E, C, and beta-carotene as anti-aging
supplements is their ability to attach to free radicals and scavenge them
before they can do harm to living tissues. Hopefully further understanding
the mechanism and action of rasayanas will help substantiate the ancient
claims of the benefits of these natural tonics to enhance vitality throughout
one’s life span. At the Chopra Center for Well Being in La Jolla, California, we have been
using rasayana preparations to enhance energy and vitality in our patients. We have separate formulations for men and women and are encouraged by
the subjective reports of our patients. Further information on how to access
these formulations is provided in Appendix A.
QUIZ: HOW WELL AM I AGING? There is no separate “life extension” program in Ayurveda, for the simple
reason that all of its approaches—diet, exercise, daily and seasonal routines,
meditation, and the various healing techniques—are meant to enhance
longevity . Considering the superior health of our patients today , we have
every hope that a breakthrough in aging has been made. The classic
Ayurvedic texts define one hundred years as a normal life span without
infirmity or disease. We are aiming for at least that. Can you prove to yourself that you are getting younger by following this
program? Simple as it sounds, feeling happy and healthy is one good
yardstick; being young at heart is recognized as a marker of long life. On amore objective basis, researcher s at Duke University have compiled a short
list of health factors correlated with longevity . Statistically speaking, people
who rate well on each of these points have the best chance of living longer
than average. The following quiz is based on the Duke inventory . The most precise way
to use it is in conjunction with a complete physical examination, but an
informal person al rating will still tell you a lot. Being as honest and
objective as you can, answer every question, giving yourself:
10 points for Excellent
5 points for Average
0 points for Below Average
Having arrived at a final score, follow Ayurveda for six months, then rate
yourself again. The chances are very good that you will notice a surprisingly
large improvement, and it is likely to occur well before the six months are
up. The following factors are listed in order of relative importance:To rate yourself: A perfec t score (90 points) indicates that you are very
likely to live longer , perhaps much longer , than the national average (roughly
age 78 for women and 72 for men). An above-average score (between 65 and
90) sugg ests that your life expectancy will be at least three years higher than
the natio nal norm, more if you are already past middle age. An average score
(45–65) indicates an average life expectancy . A below-average score (below
40) indicates that you need to pay more attention to your health. It is not a
cause for panic, because following the programs of Ayurveda should lead to
noticeable improvements very quickly . To gain a more accurate idea of where you stand, you can refine your
score by considering a few other factors:
Age: High scores mean more as you get older . If you are over 50, a score
in the 75–90 range indicates an enhanced likelihood of long life; the same
score would not be as significant if you are only 30.Lifestyle habits: All thing s being equal, regular habits are correlated with
long life; these include eating three meals a day, getting eight hours of sleep
each night, going to bed on time, and so on. Also, being married is indicative
of a longer life expectancy than being single. Alcohol consumption should
be minimal or none; alcoholism is known to reduce life expectancy . Weight: Maintaining an ideal weight is best, although there is no harm in
being ten to fifteen pounds overweight. Life span is shortene d if you are
obese (15 percent or more over your ideal weight) or if your weight has
fluctuated drastically over a period of years. HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR SCORE
As a result of the extensive research done on meditation, we can validate
that our Ayurvedic program may improve each of the Duke University
longevity factor s. If we place the results in the context of Ayurveda as a
whole, they become even stronger . Research with rasayanas suggests that they may of fset several
deleterious aspects of the aging process, including a beneficial ef fect on
blood clotting, and a reduced susceptibility to carcinogens. Preliminary
studies suggest that rasayanas may be ef fective as free radical
scavengers that would positively impact the aging process. A pilot study on the ef fects of panchakarma suggests that this
purification procedure enhances the rejuvenating ef fect of meditation
(ten meditating subjects became on average six years younger
biologically over the period of a year while taking regular
panchakarma, as opposed to one and a half years with meditation
alone). What all of this implies is that a complete Ayurvedic program should be
even more effective than meditation by itself, and in fact may lead to all the
powerful rejuvenating effects promised in the ancient texts. A basic program
would include meditation, the appropriate Ayurvedic body-type diet,
supplemented with rasayanas, regular exercise, panchakarma treatment atleast once a year, and the major points given in the daily routine, or
dinacharya , to be discussed in chapter 1 1. OceanofPDF .comPART II
LIVING IN TUNE WITH NATURE
OceanofPDF .comCHAPTER 10
THE IMPULSE TO EVOL VE
The phrase “living in tune with nature” means something very precise in
Ayurveda: havin g healthy desires that match what you actually need. As
nature made you, what you need and what you want should not conflict. This is because all desires originate at the quantum level, as faint vibrations
whose dynamic interaction is always balanced. If either the body or the
mind tip out of balance, a correcting impulse is sent from the quantum
body , and you register it as something you desire. At this moment, millions of impulses are flowing through your nervous
system, turning into all the actions you perform every day. To want a drink
of water , for example, satisfies the separate need of 50 trillion cells in your
body , each of which sends a message to be decoded by special receptors in
the hypothalamus. In turn, the hypothalamus makes the mind body
connection by manufacturing the specific neurotransmitters, or messenger
molecules, that make you think, “I’m thirsty .”
A natural desire of any kind takes a similar path. A need arises
somewhere in the quantum mechanical body , the mind body connection is
made in the brain, and then you experience an impulse to act. As long as
needs and desires match, you are living in tune with nature; the path of
desire is not blocked. Ideally , every bite of food you eat should taste
delicious to you and at the same time satisfy a precise demand for nutrients. Your skin may be asking for extra vitamin C to repair damage from a
sunburn, a stressed hipbone may be asking for extra calcium, a flexed arm
muscle for more potassium. Unfortunately , it is very easy to interfere with this pathway , and when we
do so, we slip out of tune with nature. Instead of trusting the balanced body
to tell us what nutrients it needs, all too often we indiscrim inately takevitamins, compulsively overeat, crave far too many sweets and junk foods
of all kinds. The current vogue of “life extension” is based on distrust of the
body , trying to second-guess its weaknesses by cramming it with
megadoses of vitamin E, beta-carotene, selenium, or whatever new
nutriceutical has joined the list. It has not been proved that taking supplementary vitamins and minerals
alone prolongs life. On the contrary, separate studies conducted in Southern
California showed that older people who obsessively take vitamins and eat
only “health food” do not live any longer than average, while people who
have balanced lifestyle habits (going to bed on time, eating three meals a
day, drinking alcohol only very moderately , and so on) live up to eleven
years longer than the norm. You do not have to go to an extreme to get the most from your body . The
body is intellige nt. At the quan tum level, it knows exactly what it needs,
down to the last atom and molecule of food, the faintest breath you breathe,
the smallest action you take. In the following chapters, I outline the kind of
foods, exercise, and daily and seasonal routines that Ayurveda considers in
tune with nature. Although very specific, these guidelines are not rules but
pointers to put you in touch with your quantum mechanical body . Once you
are back in touch , action goes much more smoothly , correct choices become
more automatic, and mistakes become less frequent. Before getting into specifics, though, I’d like to say more about the
evolutionary path itself. MAKING RIGHT CHOICES
To conti nue evolving and progressing in life, you must make the right
choices for yourself, day after day, minute after minute. The choices are
endless because the challenges of life are endless, so to avoid all the wrong
choices seems impossible. But Ayurveda says that in fact it is easy—once
you begin to listen to your own deepest nature.For every decision you make, major or mundane, your quantum
mechanical body sees only one correct choice, although your mind might
recognize many . This confusion gives rise to internal conflict. Why does a
smoker compulsively reach for another cigarette, knowing the harm it can
do? Why does a compulsive eater take second helpings in the absence of
hunger? Wrestling with these conflicts is futile— our actions are based on
too many individual processes, all of them changing all the time. Defeating
lethal viruses or bacteria is child’s play compared with trying to defeat
people’ s self-destructive habits. For example, we all know chronically
overweight people who have turned everywhere for a cure, to drugs,
psychiatry , beha vior modificat ion, and even surgery, with little or no
success. In Ayurveda we propose a simpler solution. Instead of wrestling with all
the wrong choices people are likely to make in the grip of unhealthy
desires, we put our patients in touch with the source of their desires. At the
source, everyone has healthy desires. In Sanskrit, this is called sattva , a
word often translated as “purity .” A better translation of sattva is “the
impulse to evolve,” and I will demonstrate why . In Ayurveda there are three natural impulses at work in any given
situation. One is sattva, the impulse to evolve, to go forward, to progress. The second impulse is tamas , the exact opposite, the impulse to stay the
same or to regress. Fixed between these two opposites is rajas , a more
neutral impulse that dictates action for its own sake. A diagram of the three
looks like this:
As you can see, rajas poses the question, “How should I act in this
situation?” Sattv a favors the choice that is evolutionary , tamas the one that
is stable. All three impulses are necessary to life. If you are sittin g up late at
night, tempted to watch the second late movie on TV, one impulse tells you
to go to bed, while its opposite tells you to continue sitting there. This is
sattva and tamas in conflict, with rajas acting as the spur, urging you to
choose. Nature has made us so that our minds instinctively operate according to
these three guna s, or tendencies (they are also sometimes called “the mental
doshas”). People can be classified according to which of these three gunas
is generally dominant. Rajasic people like to act. Their minds work constantly and tend towar d
impatience, impulsiveness, and kinetic outlets of all kinds. Sattvic people like to progress. Their minds do not dwell on action for its
own sake, but only on action that is cr eative, life-supporting, and healthy . Tamasic people like to stay the same . Their minds do not like to act; they
enjoy set r outines and tend towar d the status quo. These types are not cut and dried, since everyone contains elements of
each. But all of us know pure rajasic types— extroverted, endlessly full of
energy, people who rush in where angels fear to tread. And we know pure
tamasic types—slow to move, resistant to new ideas, hard-core
traditionalists for whom the best things in life are always in the past. (Ayurvedic doctors who come to America from India often shake their
heads and say that we are a hopelessly rajasic people, whose creativity and
ambition need more of the gentl e, purifying element of sattva.) However we
were shaped by nature, becomin g more sattvic is a worthwhile goal, for it is
sattva that makes a person more creative, healthier , and happier . The secret of sattvic people is that they have naturally healthy desires. Unhealthy desir es can arise in anyone because of mental ama. You will
remember that “mental ama” is the term used for impurities, or negativetendencies in the mind. Sattva is the force of purity that combats them. The
Ayurvedic sages say that mental ama is produced by:
Negative emotions—anger , fear , self-criticism, greed, resentment
Psychological stress—family problems, tensions at work, loss of
money or job, divorce, death in the family
Lethar gy, mental inertia
Unwholesome surroundings
Contact with other people’ s negativity
Violent, crude, or shocking books or other forms of entertainment
The debate over whether it is morally right to show violence on
television misse s the essential point, according to Ayurveda. The issue is
one of health. The sight of violence gets translated into unhealth y chemicals
in the body , leading to the buildup of ama in our thoughts as well as in our
cells. Everyone has a right to expose himself to any kind of influence he
wants, but the physician’ s role is to warn against those influences that
damage our well-being. Avoiding mental ama is therefore considered a
preventive measure against the imbalances that lead ultimately to disease. You cannot force your body to make evolutionary choices. If you are
eating the wrong foods, chain-smoking, drinking excessively , or making
any other kind of unhealthy choice in your daily life, some block exists
somewhere in your pathway of desire. Some impurity is keepin g you away
from your quantum self. I have already given many techniques for
removing such blockages. All of these, from panchakarma to meditation to
the bliss technique, remove tremendous amounts of impurity every time you
use them. After a while, as you continue using the Ayurvedic techniques, you will
see your sattvic side emer ge, no matter how blocked your system was to
begin with. When that happen s, you are approaching the place calledperfect health. Sattva lies closest to nature’ s heart, because everything in
nature expands, evolves, and grows. Sattva exists in us as our instinct for
balance, our life-enhancing attitudes, our innate dignity and respect for
others, and our love. As you increase in sattva, you effortlessly live in purity
and move in the direction of higher evolution. Then and only then does the
phrase “living in tune with nature” reveal its real meaning. HOW TO INCREASE SA TTV A
Ayurveda says that many different kinds of influences can increase
sattva, while at the same time keeping ama at a minimum. Some
recommendations are familiar to us: consuming pure food and water ,
avoiding obvious toxins such as pesticides, and getting a full night’ s sleep. Adequate rest is needed to bring out the clear , happy side of the mind. Spend time outside in nature, walking in the woods and mountains or
beside the ocean, lakes, and streams; listen to the sound of the wind, the
rustling of the trees, and the songs of birds—all of these purify the senses
and bring them back to their source in nature. In Ayurveda we consider
anything that is life-supporting to be sattvic, so nurturing positive emotions
and secure relationships is vital—the absence of love and care from your
life will damage sattva far more than any wrong diet. In addition, the following pointe rs, established thousands of years ago in
the Vedic texts and echoed in the purest traditions of every culture, serve as
time-tested guides for increasing sattva in daily life:
Be pleasant and tolerant toward everyone. Act on due reflection, not on impulse. Refrain from anger or criticism, even when you feel it is justified
(sattvic people do not point out others’ weaknesses “for their own
good”). Take time every day for play , humor , relaxation, and good company .Wake with the sun in the morning, watch the sun set in the evening,
and occasionally stroll in the moonlight, especially if there is a full
moon. Eat light, natural foods, favoring milk, saf fron, rice, and ghee (clarified
butter)—a complete list of sattvic foods is given on page 307, along
with the deeper rationale for adhering to a pure diet. Be generous with others in every way—giving presents and
compliments to people around you, pointing out the best in everyone,
letting others make you great instead of trying to be great yourself. To
a sattvic person, all relationships exist primarily as an opportunity to
give. The complement to this basic attitude is that nature will always
provide enough to fulfill one’ s needs. When this kind of generosity and
trust truly blossoms, a sattvic person has nothing to fear from life and
everything to receive from it; he can let life happen without forcing it. OceanofPDF .comCHAPTER 11
DAIL Y ROUTINE—RIDING NA TURE’S WAVES
Every day the sun rises, the sun sets, and hundreds of different things
happen in between. Nature is so beautifully arranged that no matter how
different these things are, they fit into one rhythm. Actually , there are many
rhythms nestled inside one another , wheels within wheels. Modern
medicine has disclosed many of the more obvious cycles in our bodies—
the heart beating every three-q uarters of a second, the lungs swelling to
inhale air ten to fourteen times a minute. But many of the body’ s changes
remain mysterious. Why does a person typically weigh the most at seven in
the evening, as science has discovered? Why are our hands hottest at around
two in the morning? Ayurveda’ s answ er is that there are “master cycles” in us governed by the
quantum mechan ical body . Every day two waves of change pass through us,
each bringing a Kapha cycle, then a Pitta, and finally a Vata cycle. These
three phases take place from sunrise to sunset, then again from sunset to
sunrise. The approximate times are as follows:
One of the most basic aspects of living in tune with nature is to respect
these master cycles that suppor t our physical existence. We are meant to
ride nature’ s waves, not to fight against them. In fact, our bodies are already
riding them, or doing the best they can in the face of our contrary habits.At dawn , the day begins in a Kapha period. It is easy to see why early
morning is considered Kapha—waking up, the body feels slow, heavy ,
relaxed, and calm, all of which are Kapha qualities. The most physically
active time and also the peak of appetite occur at noon, in the middle of the
first Pitta period. Pitta is respon sible for metabolizing food, for distributing
energy, and for more efficient physical functioning in general. This helps
explain why factory work reach es a peak of efficiency at noon. This first
cycle ends with a Vata period beginning at 2 P.M. Vata controls the nervous
system, and in fact researchers have discovered that people do best in
mental tests during the afternoon. The times when you can add numbers the
fastest (3 P.M.) and exhibit the most manual dexterity (4 P.M.) fall into this
Vata period. The day’s second cycle repeats the same sequence of Kapha, Pitta, and
Vata, but they take on a different complexion. The evening is relaxed and
slow, just like the early morning , but sunset brings the body back to a stable
resting place. Now Kapha inclines toward inertia. Similarly , Pitta appetite is
not as strong at night as at noon. Pitta digests dinner after you go to bed, but
since the body is asleep, the heat is expended to keep you warm and to fuel
the rebuilding of tissues, which occurs mostly at night. The Vata period in
the early -morning hours expresses itself through the nervous system, but
instead of thinking quickly as you do in the afternoon, you go into active
dream sleep (called REM, or “rapid eye movement” sleep), when brain
impulses are at their liveliest for the whole night. And thus the circle of the
day is complete. ONE DA Y IN PERFECT RHYTHM
If you learn to ride these large waves of Vata, Pitta, and Kapha, your
body will instinctively tune its subcycles, its many wheels withi n wheels, to
follow suit. What would it be like to live a day in perfect rhythm? Ayurveda
provides an ideal schedule called the dinacharya , or daily routi ne, that
shows us how to find out.DINACHAR YA: THE DAIL Y ROUTINE
Four pivotal times set the rhythm of the entire daily cycle:
The hours given are for starting an activity—the morning begins between
6 and 8 A.M., lunch begins anyw here from noon to 1 P.M., and so on. These
times are approximate and chan ge with the seasons. Ayurveda would prefer
that you follow the sun and rise an hour before dawn every day of the year. By gettin g up during a Vata period, you take advantage of Vata’s qualities of
lightness, exhilaration, and fresh ness. These are infused into your body just
before sunrise and last throughout the day . Waiting too long into the Kapha period that follows (6 to 10 A.M.) causes
you to wake up feeling duller , heavier , and less fresh. These qualities will
also follow you all day; indeed, if you are a late riser year after year, you
will train these Kapha qualities into your doshas and you will feel
chronically “sleepy .”
If you wanted to map out the ideal day, it would arrange itself naturally
around the four pivotal points:
Rising: 6–8 A.M.
Wake up without an alarm clock
Drink a glass of warm water (to encourage regular morning bowel
movements)Urinate; move your bowels (without forcing)
Brush your teeth
Clean your tongue if coated
Massage your body with sesame oil (abhyanga)
Bathe (in warm water , not too hot or cold)
Exercise: Sun Salute (page 326)
Yoga positions (page 339)
Balanced breathing (Pranayama, page 360)
Meditate
Eat breakfast
Take a mid-morning walk (for one-half hour)
Lunch: Noon–1 P .M. Eat lunch early (it should be lar gest meal of the day)
Sit quietly for five minutes after eating
Walk to aid your digestion (5 to 15 minutes)
Meditate in the late afternoon
Dinner: 6–7 P .M. Eat a moderate dinnerSit quietly for five minutes after eating
Walk to aid your digestion (5 to 15 minutes)
Bedtime: 9:30–10:30 P .M. Engage in light activity in the evening
Get to bed early , but at least three hours after dinner
Do not read, eat, or watch TV in bed
Naturally this is a very full schedule, but I hasten to say that hundreds of
our patie nts (and their families) observe the dinacharya and have abundant
time left over to pursue active lives. If you hesitate to modify your
schedule, rest assured that you can be as busy as a doctor if you know how
to ride nature’ s waves. The whole point of making the day orderly is that all
your activity becomes healthier , more enjoyable, and more efficient. You
gain more time than you lose, and it is quality time. You will note that the main exercises are walking, plus gentle yoga poses
coupled with meditation. Most of the other points are self-explanatory . I
would just like to make a few additional points about each period of the
day. RISING: 6–8 a.m. Morning is a special time in Ayurveda, when nature sends out its most
delicate message s and you are most sensitive to them. Your nervous system
has been built so that the sight of dawn, the still air on your skin, the faint
sounds of birds and animals awakening, all set the stage for renewal. Alert
to the slightest influence, the whole body is silent and poised in a delicate
balance.When you wake up, you shou ld feel alert and clearheaded with no
worries lingering from the day before, indicating that your nervous system
is ready to be renewed. It is harmful to disturb or ignore this one
opportunity to be naturally re-created. Writer Joan Mills has beautifully
expressed the specialness of early rising: “From dawn’ s simplicities arise
moments that are profound past explaining and powerful beyond sentiment. There are mornings when some small, isolated joy carries more conviction
than a month of woe.”
Medically speaking, the body precisely calibrates the correct biochemical
balance for a full day’s activities. It also empties the system of wastes from
the previous day, which is why morning elimination is valuable before
starting the new day’s cycle. Having a bowel movement at this time is
something you can gently encourage by drinking a glass of warm water and
then allowing five minutes or so in the bathroom to see if your body wants
to have a bowel movement. If not, don’t worry about it. In time, if they
keep this practice up regularly , most people find that an instinct for morning
elimination will emer ge. When you brush your teeth, Ayurveda says that you should clean the
white coating from the tongue if one has appeared overnight. This is the
residue of ama, either from last night’ s meal or from a deeper imbalance. Not everyone wakes up with a coated tongue, so this step is optional. As
your diet impro ves and you get into better balance, the coati ng tends to
disappear . The dinacharya asks you to do many different things in the early
morning. It takes discipline to do all of them. You will be extending your
routine by about an hour, which is a big change. But the rewa rds are big,
too. When our patients stick to their morning routine in full, they report
exhilarating health, unmatched by those who are careless or haphazard
about it. Try adding a few new elements to your present schedule and see how
comfortable you feel with them . In order , the most important things to add
are:Early rising (at dawn)
Meditation
Ayurvedic exercises: Sun Salutes, Yoga positions
Oil massage
Meditation has already been discussed, and Ayurvedic exercise s will be
covered later, in a separate section. That leaves the oil massage (abhyanga),
which is one of the most enjoy able parts of the dinacharya as well as a
prime way to balance Vata dosha. Lightly massaging the entire body with a thin film of oil before you bathe
makes your skin feel warm and supple, a perfect balance for the cold
dryness of Vata. Our Vata-type patients report that they are less prone to feel
anxious or scattered during the day if they do their morning massage
regularly . In fact, everyone would benefit enormously from balancing their
Vata right at the start of the day. The skin contains thousands of cutaneous
nerves that are connected to every part of the body . Science also recognizes
that the skin is a major producer of endocrine hormones. In scientific terms, your morning massage works by soothing the two
master systems of the body , the nervous system and the endoc rine system. No wonder that in ancient times Charaka lavished praise on the practice of
abhyanga, holding that it rejuvenates the skin, tones the muscles, eliminates
impurities, and promotes youth fulness. Massaging yourself is also a good
way simply to start off the day relaxed, which Ayurved a considers
extremely important. People who approach the day as a race against time do
not have the best chance at perfect balance. Here is how abhyanga is done. HOW TO DO AN OIL MASSAGE
(ABHY ANGA)
Since this is a very light massage, it requires no more than a scant quarter
cup of warm oil. Use a refined nut or seed oil sold in health-food stores. You can also order herbalized oils (page 378). Vata types do best with
sesame or almon d oil; Pittas respond to olive or coconut and Kaphas benefit
from light or warm oils such as sunflower or sesame. To heat the oil: Put three to four tablespoons of oil in a clear plastic cup
or a squeeze bottle and set it in a bowl of very hot water . Wait a minute or
two until the oil reaches skin temperature. Or, you can put the oil in a glass
cup and heat it for ten to fifteen seconds in the microwave, being very
careful not to over heat it . Technically , it is best to use cured oil that has been subjected to high heat
for only a brief period. You can carefully heat your oil to 212 degrees F,
making sure that you watch it the whole time to prevent a possible fire. The best place to perform your massage is in the bathroom. As good as it
is for your body , there is no doubt that abhyanga is messy . No matter how
careful you are, some oil will get splashed around. To minimize this, use a
sheet of plastic (from a disposa ble trash bag) to cover the floor while you
do your massage. Or put a small plastic stool in your tub and do your
massage there. The mini-massag e given at the end of this section is also less
messy . FULL BODY MASSAGE (5–10 MINUTES)
Start with your head: Pour a tablespoon of warm oil on your scalp. Using
the flat of your hand and fingers, massage the oil in vigorously . Cover your
entire scalp with small circular strokes, as if you were shampooing. Move
to your face and ears, massag ing more gently . Gentle massage of the
temples and backs of the ears is especially good for settling Vata dosha. Apply a little oil to your hands and massage your neck, front and back,
then your shoulders. Use the flat of your palm and fingers. Vigorously mass age your arms, using a circular motion at the shoulders
and elbows and long, back-and-forth motions on the long parts.It is important not to be too vigorous when you get to your trunk. Using
large, gentle circular motions, massage the chest, stomach, and lower
abdomen. (Ayurveda traditionally advises moving in a clockwise direction.) A straight up-and-down motion is used over the breastbone. Apply a bit of oil to your hand s and reach around without straining to
massage your back and spine—use up-and-down motions, or whatever you
can do. Vigorously massage your legs as you did your arms— circular at the
ankles and knees, straight back-and-forth on the long parts. Begin abhyanga with vigor ous scalp massage.With the remaining bit of oil, vigorously massage your feet and toes. Washing off the oil: Keeping a thin, almost undetecta ble film of oil on the
body is consider ed very beneficial for toning the skin, balancin g Vata, and
keeping the muscles warm during the day. Therefore, you should wash
yourself with warm, not hot, water and mild soap. If you look good with
glossy hair, leave a bit of oil on your scalp, too, but most people will need
to use shampoo. MINI-MASSAGE (1–2 MINUTES)
Doing a full-body abhyanga sometimes takes too long for everyone’ s
morning schedu le, but it is so beneficial that we would rather have you do a
short massage than none at all. The most important parts of the body to
cover are the head and feet. They can be worked while you sit on the edge
of the tub for a minute in the morning. This mini-massage takes only about
two tablespoons of oil. Take one tablespoon of warm oil and rub it into your scalp, using the
same small, circular motions described above. Use the flat of your hand,
and your fingertips. Massage the forehead from side to side with your palm. Gently massage your temples, using circular motions, then gently rub the
outside of the ears. Massage the back and front of your neck. Taking the second tablespoon of oil, massage both feet using the flat of
your hand. Work oil around your toes with your fingertips. Vigorously
massage the soles of the feet with brisk back-and-forth motions of your
palms. Sit quietly for a few seconds to relax and soak in the oil, then bathe
normally . LUNCH: NOON–1 P .M.To catch the Pitta time of day at its height, it is best to eat lunch early , at
noon or just before. Pitta stokes agni, the digestive fire, to its bright est at
this hour; therefore, Ayurveda recommends that lunch be the biggest meal
of the day. Since most people do not perform heavy physical labor , lunch
does not have to be huge and hearty . Simply eat what you norm ally would
for dinner . To avoid becoming drowsy in the afternoon, do not drink alcohol at
noon; warm water is the beverag e that best promotes good diges tion. In any
event, minimize iced tea, ice water , or very cold soft drinks. All of these put
out agni and make it harder to digest the meal. Two other steps will remind the body of its daily rhythm. The first is to
sit quietly for five minutes at the table after you finish eating, preferably in
silence. The second is to take a short walk outside or to lie down for five
minutes after the meal. Both stabilize the system and help start the process
of digestion. DINNER: 6–7 P .M. Just after you come home from work is the time for afternoon meditation. You can prepare for it with a set of yoga positions and five minutes of
balanced breathing, just as in the morning. Lying down for a few minutes
beforehand also removes the jagged edge of a long workday and makes the
meditation much deeper . As with lunch, dinner comes early in order to catch a good time in the
daily cycle. In this case, six o’clock is the beginning of a Kapha period,
when the body wants to settle down. It is not a good idea to put too much
fuel into your system at this time, since Pitta will not be along to digest
your dinner until ten at night, when you are in bed. Your greatest digestive
power is in the afternoon, which also allows ample time for complete
digestion. Ayurveda is very strong on making sure that digestion is
complete, since half-digested food is what creates ama.Dinner should be a smaller meal than lunch. For many people, a bowl of
hot soup with toast, herb tea, and fresh fruit are adequate. You are probably
not used to eatin g lighter at dinner than lunch, but try it for a change. You’ll
be pleasantly surprised at how settled and comfortable your body feels
when it doesn’ t have to diges t full rations at night. Ayurveda cautions
against fermented foods such as cheese, sour cream, and yogurt at night; red
meat is best avoided since it is harder to digest. Warm water or herb tea is the beverage of choice at dinner . Ayurveda
makes no bones about considering alcohol a toxin that has no place in a
healthy life, but I recognize that many people drink liquor after work. The
basic rule is not to drink alcohol by itself, and don’t have it ice cold. It is
best to eliminate the cocktail hour altogether and eat an earlier dinner . Alcohol consum ption with your meal should be light—a glass of wine, for
example, or one beer . A short walk after dinner helps promote digestion and prepares the
system for a quiet evening spent reading, listening to music, or talking with
friends and family . Avoid action-packed movies and TV late at night, since
you don’ t want too much stimulation before bedtime. BEDTIME: 9:30–10:30 P .M. In order to get up at dawn, your bedtime has to be early . Attuned to the
Kapha cycle that ends the eveni ng, Kapha types already favor going to bed
around ten; this is the Ayurved ic ideal for everyone. It allows the body’ s
rhythms to slow down naturally , gives a deeper , more relaxing sleep, and
provides time for the body to generate new tissue, which happens mostly at
night. (I have already mentioned that getting a full night’ s sleep has been
correlated with longevity .) If you wait much past ten o’cloc k, the ensuing Pitta period will make you
want to be active again—that is why people feel drowsy early in the
evening, only to get a surge of energy around midnight, the absolute height
of the Pitta period. Going to bed early is basically an all-or -nothingproposition, as far as your body rhythms are concerned. Therefore, I
encourage you to try to get to bed at the Ayurvedic time. A week of self-
discipline can be a revelation in terms of how good you feel the next day. To experience a day in perfect rhythm, you need a night of perfect sleep. OceanofPDF .comCHAPTER 12
DIET—EA TING FOR PERFECT BALANCE
In Ayurveda, a balanced diet does not revolve around fats, carbohydrates,
and proteins. Nor are calories, vitamins, and minerals given direct attention. We know these nutrients intellectually , not through direct experience. You
cannot detect the vitamin C in your orange juice, much less the difference
between it and vitamin A. For the most part, Western nutrition comes out of
laboratory analysis. Ayurvedic nutrition comes directly from nature. When
your taste buds greet a bite of food, an enormous amount of useful
information is delivered to the doshas. Working solely with this information,
Ayurveda allow s us to eat a balanced diet naturally , guided by our own
instincts, without turning nutrition into an intellectual headache. When food talks to your doshas, it says many things, because the different
gunas—heavy and light, dry and oily, hot and cold—are present in it. But the
primary information is containe d in its taste. Ayurveda recognizes six tastes,
or rasas: sweet, sour, salty, and bitter are the four we already know , plus two
others, pungent and astringent. All spicy food is pungent. Astringent is the
taste that puckers your mouth. The tannin in tea is astringent, as is the dry,
mealy taste of beans. In Ayurveda a balanced diet must contain all six rasas at every meal. The
following dinner menu would be balanced:
Bibb lettuce salad (Bitter , Astringent)
Barbecued chicken with steamed rice (Salty , Sour , Pungent, Sweet)
Vanilla ice cr eam (Sweet)
Even if you eliminate the ice cream for dessert, this meal will remain in
balance, since it still has all six tastes. If the barbecued chicken was replacedby bake d chick en, the rasas of pungent and sour would be missing; they
could be made up by adding a few slices of tomato (sweet and sour) and
radish (pungent) to the salad. It is not necessary to overload a meal with each taste. Just a hint of herbs
and spices will add pungent and bitter to a meal. Nor is it good to let the
same tastes dominate day after day. The basic rule is simply to give the body
all six rasas at each meal so that it can respond to food completely . SATISFYING THE DOSHAS
Taste can also be used to balance an aggravated dosha, since each dosha is
on the lookout for the tastes that bring it into balance. Vata is balanced by salt, sour , and sweet. Pitta is balanced by bitter , sweet, and astringent. Kapha is balanced by pungent , bitter , and astringent. (The italicized taste has the strongest ef fect in decreasing a dosha.) This basic information opens the door for a wealth of knowledge about
what your body type should eat. In the following sections, we will expand
upon this immense field. Our discussion covers the following subjects:BODY -TYPE DIETS
The most basic guide to what you should eat is your body type. If you are
a Vata, this dosh a wants to be balanced with tastes different from those of
either a Pitta or a Kapha. Let’s say that two people are eating lunch at an
outdoor cafe and both order a chef salad, iced tea, and lemon sherbet. If one
person is a Pitta, this is an excellent lunch, for the sweet tastes and coolness
of the food help balance Pitta dosha. But if the other person is a Vata, this
meal is not good at all. Raw greens, particularly if bitter , cool drinks, and the
lack of solid nourishment all throw Vata out of balance. When lunch is over,
the two people will walk away feeling different, even though they ate the
same meal. The Pitta will feel buoyant and refreshed, the Vata will feel
unsatisfied and unener getic. That is why it is important to match your prakruti, your natural makeup,
with the correct diet. Following is a table of food qualities as they affect the
doshas.As you can see, each section contains three tastes and three gunas, or
qualities. The six tastes you already know: sweet, sour, salty, bitter , pungent,
and astringent. The six gunas, which come in pairs, are:
Heavy or light—wheat is heavy , barley is light, beef is heavy , chicken
is light, cheese is heavy , skim milk is light
Oily or dry—milk is oily , honey is dry , soybeans are oily , lentils are dry ,
coconut is oily , cabbage is dry
Hot or cold (heats or cools the body)—pepper is hot, mint is cold,
honey is hot, sugar is cold, eggs are hot, milk is cold
These qualities speak directly to the tongue and stomach. The operative
principle is “like speaks to like.” If you want to balance Pitta, avoid food that
shares its qualities. A chili pepper , being pungent, hot, and oily, will
naturally cause Pitta to become aggravated.It is not necessa ry to memorize these qualities. Although Ayurvedic texts
offer long lists of foods matched to their tastes and gunas, this knowledge is
already built into your body . If you are in balance, you will want hot food
when you feel cold, light food when you feel heavy . The same is true of
taste. If you are a Kapha type, having a taste for green salads would tell you
that you are in balance, becaus e greens are generally bitter and astringent
(these are two tastes that are good for you). In a nutshell, that is what living in tune with nature means—what you like
to eat is what your body needs for balance. On the other hand, if you are the
same Kapha person and exclus ively crave potato chips (salty), ice cream
(sweet), and cheese (sour), your instincts are not in balance, and neither will
be your Kapha dosha. The simple remedy is to start eating all six tastes
again, moving away from your cravings. This will start to bring you back
into balance, and as that happens, you will naturally regain your lost
instincts. You won’ t abandon ice cream and potato chips, but a green salad
will satisfy you just as much, because it satisfies your dominant dosha. HOW TO CHOOSE THE RIGHT BODY -TYPE DIET
Now that you know the general principles behind a balanced Ayurvedic diet,
we can look at the specifics of each body type. Choosing which diet to
follow is quite easy . Choose the diet that balances your dominant dosha. If you are a pure
Vata, for example, you will generally follow a Vata-pacifying diet. The
same is true if you are a Vata-Pitta, although you can lean in the
direction of the Pitta diet when you need to (during hot weather or if
you display signs of Pitta aggravation, for instance). If you are undec ided about which of two doshas you should pacify, reflect
on what foods you naturally favor that make you feel healthy and balanced. These will generally point you in the direction of the right diet. If you are
one of the rare three-dosha types, you can usually eat any kind of Ayurvedicdiet and remain in balance, but once again, let your instincts, the season of
the year , and the state of your health be your guide. If an Ayurvedically trained doctor has told you to balance a specific
dosha, follow that diet. Lean your diet in the direction indicated by the season of the year . Changes of season require certain modifications in your basic diet (you
wouldn’ t drink iced tea in winter , for example, even if you are a strong
Pitta type). These seasonal changes are covered in chapter 14,
“Seasonal Routine.”
Vata-Pacifying Diet
Favor:
Warm food, moderately heavy textur es
Added butter and fat
Salt, sour , and sweet tastes
Soothing and satisfying foods
Vata is a cold, dry dosha, and the warm, nourishing foods we associate
with winter—he arty stews and soups, slow-cooked casseroles, fresh-baked
bread and fruit pies—give a good diet that soothes this dosha. At the
opposite end of the spectrum, the foods we gravitate to in summer—cold
salads, iced drinks, raw vegetables and greens—are not very congenial to it. Vata types tend to have erratic digestion, so soft, thoroughly cooked food
that is easily digested helps them. Vata dosha is also very sensitive to the
atmosphere surrounding a meal. The best food in the world will not be good
for you if tension at the table is curdling your stomach. Anythin g that makes
dining a calmer , more restful experience will help to pacify Vata dosha. The Vata-pacifying diet given here is the first choice for all Vata types,
unless diagnosis by a Ayurvedically trained physician has indicated
something else. Within a few days of beginning this diet, you shoulddefinitely notice that your energy level is steady and that you feel more
balanced, calmer , and happier . If you suffer from mild symptoms of Vata
imbalance, such as insomnia, nervousness, or worry , this diet is also a
natural choice. Try it for two weeks and see if your symptoms are alleviated. We find that the following points are helpful when you start a Vata-
pacifying diet. All soothing foods are generally good for settling disturbed Vata: milk
(preferably warm), cream, butter , warm soups and long-cooked stews,
hot cereals, and fresh-baked bread. All contain sweet, the most soothing
taste to the body; most are also warm and heavy . A nourishing breakfast, the more substantial the better , will improve
Vata throughout the day . Cream of rice or wheat is the best hot cereal
for Vata, but anything warm, milky , and sweet is beneficial. Many Vata types experience a drastic ener gy slump in the late
afternoon. Having hot tea with cookies or some other sweet is a good
idea. Think of the four o’clock English teatime. Herb tea is more
soothing than regular tea, whose high caf feine content can disturb Vata
types. You can try brewing gotu kola tea. This Indian herb, which is
said to be excellent for calming the nerves, is available in health-food
stores. You can also order Ayurvedic tea in bags (page 377). If you take
five minutes for your tea break in a quiet spot before heading home
from work, you will find the end of the day much less tiring. Pungent is not among the favored Vata tastes, but spicy food generally
turns out to be satisfying to Vata types, because most spicy Mexican or
Indian food is warm and has abundant oil in it. Ginger is the best
pungent spice for Vata and is often used to improve Vata digestion (see
page 301). Also, the use of sweet spices, such as cinnamon, fennel, and
cardamom, helps restore a dull appetite, from which Vatas tend to
suffer. Warm, moist food is very settling for Vata. Cooked grains and cereals
are the best choices here. When you feel nervous, worried, or otherwiseunder pressure, a bowl of hot oatmeal or a cup of creamed vegetable
soup will make you feel much better than a candy bar or a drink. Although sweet is good for Vata, sugar eaten by itself gives a quick
energy boost that can make Vatas feel too restless. Warm milk is a
sweet food in itself; it is very good for Vata, particularly with a little
sugar or honey . Sugary sweets should be eaten in combination with
nourishing ones like milk. Dry, salty snacks are not as good for Vata as salted nuts, which are
heavier and oily , two qualities that pacify Vata. Almonds are the best
choice. Ayurveda always recommends that almonds be skinned before
they are eaten; standard advice is to soak a dozen whole almonds in
water overnight, then peel and eat them in the morning to balance Vata. Since nuts and seeds are dif ficult to digest, Vatas need to eat them in
small quantities, preferably ground into butters. Tahini (sesame paste) is
an excellent source of sesame oil, one of the best foods for warming up
and balancing Vata. All sweet fruits are good for Vata, and green grapes and mangoes are
the best. Astringent fruits such as apples and pears need to be cooked
before eating. Unripe fruit, being very astringent, is to be avoided,
especially unripe bananas. Any cold, light, low-calorie food increases Vata and makes you feel
dissatisfied. If you are partial to salads, let them come to room
temperature and add oily dressing to make them more balancing. The
same holds for raw vegetables. Eat them sparingly and not ice cold. In
general, you should cook all your vegetables with a little oil rather than
steaming them. This will make many “wrong” vegetables more
acceptable to Vata dosha. When you go out for dinner , ask for warm water to sip in place of ice
water , take the hot soup instead of salad, and feel free to eat bread and
butter , as well as dessert (preferably a warm dessert like apple pie,
rather than ice cream, whose coldness hampers Vata digestion).A hot breakfast cereal for dinner , although not the usual thing, tastes
extremely good to anyone suf fering from a Vata attack. Rice served
with buttered lentils is also very good, as is a hearty minestrone-style
soup. Pasta in all forms is very soothing. | Perfect_Health_-_The_Complete_Mind_Body_Guide_by_Deepak_Chopra.txt | Summarize the following text section accurately and concisely. Maintain specific details and numerical information, and use anti-repetition mechanisms:
Rubber
tubing lies passively and lets liquid flow through it. Your arteries, on the
other hand, respond to everything that happens to you, and their responses
have to be both active and intelligent. In biology textbooks, we get the idea
that a cell divides again and again until its time is up, after about fifty
divisions, at which point it dies. But this is a drastically simplified, even a
false view. A cell has experien ces. It remembers what happens to it. It is
capable of losing its skills if links in its innate knowledge are lost or
damaged. By the same token, a cell could be new all the time, without decay,
if it preserved its complete store of intelligence. The difference between life
and death for a cell lies in its smriti, or memory. If you take the longest
perspective, a perfect memory in a cell would lead to immortality, for there
can be no death as long as renewal continues without flaws or mistakes. Science has never proved that DNA is limited in its ability to run a cell in
good working order. Each of your arteries contains the same DNA that
formed the arteries in Stone Age humans fifty thousand years ago. If DNA
can manage to make perfect arteries for five hundred centuri es, each one
containing milli ons of perfectly operating cells, there is no intrinsic reason
why your DNA should botch the job after sixty years. But the botching takes place, and in a lot fewer than sixty years. By age
12, a typical artery changes markedly in appearance. It begins to develop
irregularities in the form of yellow fatty streaks. At the microscopic level,one finds that these irregularitie s started as a result of tiny, nearly invisible
cracks on the inside of the arterial wall. A cell biologist can look at one cell
from such an artery and see the indisputable signs of age. Over the next five
decades, the signs become obvious even to a layman. If you were attending
open-chest surgery and touched a piece of old aorta, the major artery leading
from the heart, it would feel like a stiff pipe (often as stiff as bone, if
arteriosclerosis has advanced far enough). Inside, it would be riddled with
fatty pockets called plaque. You would have no trouble seeing that a terrible
mistake has been made somewhere. How does one close the gap between one reality—the immortality of
DNA—and another—the frail life span of a human being. In fact the two
realities are very close. There is no physical distance between us and our
DNA. There is only a gap that exists in the nonphysical realm of knowledge. As I have made abundantly clear by now, Ayurveda makes a shift away
from the idea of the cell as a physical package of molecules, adopting
instead the idea of the cell as a package of knowledge. As the illustration
below indicates, knowledge is dynamic. It is not packaged inertly, but in
living form, as the constant interplay of three elements. To have living knowledge, there must be a knower, an object that it
knows, and the process of knowing that connects the two. The Vedic terms
for this basic triad are rishi (knower), devata (process of knowing), and
chhandas (object of knowledge)—taken together, they form the totality of
knowing, or Samhita, the undivided state of pure awareness. The humanmind, then, is a three-in-one creation. A human body requires the same
simple ingredients, repeated countless times at different levels of the
physiology. You are a knower, your body is the object you form with your
knowledge, and the millions of cellular functions taking place inside you are
the process of knowing. DNA too is a knower, but on a different scale,
parceling out its knowledge in the form of biochemicals. On yet another
scale, a red blood corpuscle is a knower, knowing how to attach itself to
oxygen atoms for transport to all other cells in the body. This threefold model of knowle dge enables us to see how one thing—our
inner intelligence—diversifies itself into endless combinations of things. Your 50 trillion cells, bound together as a community by hundreds of
enzymes, proteins, peptides, amino acids, et cetera, represent an incredible
display of one becoming many. Yet it is dangerous to get lost in the display. The “mistake of the intellect” occurs when the mind forgets its real source—
the one intelligence flowing through every cell—and becomes hopelessly
lost in the many. To prove that this is not just a philosophical point, let’s turn
to some groundbreaking experiments that demonstrate a startlingly simple
solution to the aging process. To understand these experiment s, we need a
little background in physiology. Chronological age (how old you are according to your birth certificate) is
one way to measure the aging process, but not the most accurate one, since
people vary widely in how their bodies change over time. Physiologists
therefore refer to a second measure, called biological age, which measures
the actual rate of aging in a person’ s cells, tissues, and organ systems. Chronological age matches biological age only when you are young. Two
healthy 20-year -olds are likely to look almost identical if you compare their
hearts, livers, skin, eyesight, and so on. But after middle age no two people
have aged the same. Two 70-year -olds present drastically different profiles:
one has arthritis, the other heart disease; one is myopic, the other not; and so
on. This means that biologi cal aging, though an accurate measure
theoretically, is difficult to pin down, short of looking at every organ in the
body. Fortunatel y, there are accepted ways to measure biological age, which
include such things as near-point vision, acuity of hearing, and systolic
blood pressure (the pressure in the blood vessels when the heart is pumping). These biologica l markers of aging usually deteriorate steadil y over time;
therefore, they give a reliable approximation of the biological age of the
whole body at a given chronological age. Several years ago a team of researchers made the exciting discovery that
the biological markers of aging can be retarded or even reversed through
meditation. The research was headed by Dr. R. Keith Wallace, a physiologist
who studied eighty-four meditat ors with an average chronological age of 53. He divided his subjects into two groups according to how long they had been
regularly practic ing meditation. One group had meditated for at least five
years, the other for fewer than five years. Wallace found that meditation made his subjects biologically younger than
their years, and by a considerable amount: the short-term meditators were
five years younger than their chronological age, the long-term meditators a
full twelve years younger. In other words, a woman of 60 who had been
practicing medit ation for at least five years would typically have the body of
a 48-year -old, biologically speaking. (This does not include cosmetic
changes in skin and hair, although many of the subjects did have strikingly
youthful appear ances. ) These results did not depend on any other factor;
people were screened for diet, exercise, and other habits. Interestingly, the
controls revealed that not eating red meat was correlated with a slightly
younger biological age, in keeping with various findings on the longer life
span of vegetarians. Wallace’ s findings were unprecedented at the time. Follow-up studies
were soon cond ucted in England that confirmed his research. In one group,
meditators were seven years younger in their biological age. When the same
people were measured a year and a half later, they scored a further drop of
one and a half years, implying that a year of meditation takes off a year of
biological age. More recently, Dr. Jay Glaser, a physician with a strong background in
meditation, decided to pursue one of the naturally occurring chemicals in our
bodies that may be connected with longevity. He measured the level of an
adrenal hormon e called DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) in meditators. Although the precise function of this hormone remains mysterious, it isknown that DHEA reaches its highest levels at around age 25 and then
declines in almost a straight line, year by year, until by age 70 only 5 percent
of it remains. Initial enthusiasm over DHEA developed when it was injected
in large doses into laboratory animals and showed striking anti-aging
properties. Older animals showed renewed vigor, improve d immunity,
increased muscle tone, and better memory. Glaser found that levels of DHEA were significantly higher in all ages of
meditators compared to a matched group of nonmeditators. This was true for
both men and women, with the biggest difference showing up in the oldest
subjects. For example, Glaser found that the older meditators had the same
DHEA as nonmeditators five to ten years younger. He interpreted these
finding to sugge st that meditation somehow increases the natural production
of this interesting hormone. Researchers have studied the effects of giving DHEA to people with
mixed results. Although experiments with DHEA have shown that it causes
changes in hormonal levels and may improve people’ s mood, it has not yet
been found to have the same convincing benefits on memory or vitality in
humans as it does in animals. Still, it is intriguing that a simple mental
meditation technique can induce changes in a hormone that seems to play a
role in the aging process. This biochemical clue gives support to the
experience of people meditating who often report that they feel mentally and
physically younger. RASA YANAS—HERBS FOR LONGEVITY
Herbs are an immense part of Ayurvedic medicine that we have not yet
touched on. Many thousands of medicinal herbs are prescribed in Ayurveda,
and experienced Ayurvedic doctors often include herbs as part of their
treatment. This is because herbs are not the same as drugs, but are more
general and milder in effect. The simplest way to view herbs is as
concentrated food. One of the ways in which herbs are traditionally
classified is according to taste, using the six rasas—sweet, sour, salty, bitter,
pungent, and astringent—that apply to food. However, herbs are more potent and specific in their action. A bitter herb
like quinine can bring Pitta down promptly, making it useful for reducing
fever and inflammation. A pungent chili can instantly drain excess mucus as
it reduces Kapha. An astringent spice like turmeric can dry the phlegm in a
sore throat in a matter of minutes. In the section on diet in part III, I give
some of the common household herbs that can be used at home to balance
your doshas. Using herbs in combination with food is a safe approach. For treating disease, stronger herbs are employed, which need to be
medically supervised. In our Center we use specific herbs in the context of a
holistic approac h. Ayurvedic herbs are usually taken from the whole plant,
which reduces the possibility of harmful side effects. The principle here is
that the herb’ s active ingredient is packaged in the plant with other chemicals
that buffer it, offsetting its possible undesirable actions. In other words, in
Ayurveda the whole plant is part of nature’ s pharmacy. In Western medicine,
however, only the active ingredient is regarded as useful. HOW AYUR VEDIC HERBS WORK
As they apply to longevity, the Ayurvedic texts list some special herbs,
alone or in combination, that are classified as rasayana. The word loosely
translates as “nourishing the essence of life. ” Rasayanas are not youth
potions, they are correctives for loss of memory in the cells. Each herb is a
packet of vibrations that specifically matches a vibration in the quantum
mechanical body. The liver, for example, is built up from a specific sequence of vibrations at
the quan tum level. In the case of liver malfunction, some disru ption of the
proper sequence in these vibrations is at fault. According to Ayurveda, an
herb exists with this exact same sequence, and when applied, it restores the
liver’s functioning. The principle at work here is called complementarity. Complementarity
holds that “nature thinks everywhere alike,” a Vedic slogan that means that
nature uses the same materials when making plants, minerals, mantras, or
human bodies. These are not just similar molecules (although it is the samecarbon that goes into coal, diamonds, sugar, and blood). What is more basic
still are the subtle vibrations that hold molecules together; these are the real
building blocks of nature, according to the Vedic sages. They are so
universal that seemingly unrelated things, such as a Sanskrit word and a bay
leaf, can be considered kindred, if you know how to look deep enough. Because there is likeness everywhere in nature, an Ayurvedic doctor looks
upon herbs, primordial sounds, gemstones, colors, aromas, and foods as
equally fit to act as medicine. As used in Ayurveda, herbs do not have the
same effect on the body that Western medicines do. Our drugs kill pain,
relax muscles, replace deficien t insulin or thyroid hormone, and so on;
rasayanas introduce a subtle signal into the physiology— they “talk” to the
doshas and directly influence the flow of inner intelligence. Rasayanas are closely associate d with Indian food and therefor e are sold
in the United States as herbal food supplements, not medicine. Some sweet
fruits, such as Indian gooseberry (called amla or amalaki ), are considered
extremely good rasayanas. (In fact, this particular fruit forms the basis of
most of the health tonics that have been taken since ancestral times in India
as ginse ng is taken in China. ) To anyone interested in medicinal herbs, the
lore of rasayana is fascinating, but also extremely complex. Dozens of plants
are said to be capable of rejuvenating the body. Among those that have
common names in Western herbalism:
Gotu kola and garlic are specifics for Vata
Aloe vera and saf fron are specifics for Pitta
Elecampane and honey are specifics for Kapha (although not an herb,
honey is considered the shukra, or purest essence, of the plant world). But this list does not include the most powerful rasayanas, which only
have Indian names, among them amla, guggul, shatavari, and ashwaghanda. What makes rasayanas comple x is not just their reliance on fruits and
herbs. To extract the desired effect from an ingredient, one must know when
to pick it, how long to cook it and by what method, and in what proportion toblend it with other herbs. The recipe for a single rasayana may call for fifty
ingredients, each of which must be carefully blended. HERBAL REJUVENA TIVES
After several years of investigation and trial, we feel that rasayana is a
valuable field. It has yielded a few authentic formulas that have been re-
created from the ancient recipe s. Although rasayanas have been used for
thousands of years by Ayurvedic physicians to enhance energy and
immunity, we are only beginn ing to scientifically research the purported
health benefits of these herbal compounds. Regulations governing herbs in
this coun try permit the distribution of rasayanas as an adjunct to diet only; as
such we recomm end them for general use. No health claims are made for
them nor are they to be used as medicine. (If you have been diagnosed with a
specific illness, please do not take these or any other herbs without first
consulting a physician trained in Ayurveda. ) Among the best known rasayanas is Chavanprash, based upon the fruit
Indian gooseberry. This fruit, which is one of the highest natural sources of
vitamin C, is known as Amla or Dhatri in Sansk rit, whic h means having the
healing qualitie s of a nurse or mother. It has been classically used as a
rejuvenative for the blood, heart, lungs, and reproductive tissues. We have
formulated a modern version of Chavanprash known as Biochavan. Another important classical Ayurvedic rasayana is Brahmi Rasayana,
based upon the herb gotu kola. It is traditionally used as a revitalizer for the
brain and nervo us system. It is said to both calm restlessness and enhance
awareness. Intrigued by the vast classical Ayurvedic literature on rasayanas,
researchers have undertaken studies in this country and Europe to determine
what pharmacological actions these preparations have. The ingredients in
these rasayanas seem to have potent antioxidant effects and may also inhibit
the blood clotting cascade that is associated with the release of stress
hormones. Although it is clearly too early to extrapolate these studies on animals to
humans, it is encouraging that these ancient natural herbal compounds are
now receiving serious scientific attention. Ongoing research should help to
clarify the role that these form ulas can play in maintaining health and
reversing disease. The explanations offered for the potential benefits suggested by
preliminary studies point to the possible role of free radical chemicals in a
wide range of diseases. Free radicals are undesirable peroxides that have
long been implic ated in hastening the aging process; one of the main reasons
for the popula rity of vitamins E, C, and beta-carotene as anti-aging
supplements is their ability to attach to free radicals and scavenge them
before they can do harm to living tissues. Hopefully further understanding
the mechanism and action of rasayanas will help substantiate the ancient
claims of the benefits of these natural tonics to enhance vitality throughout
one’s life span. At the Chopra Center for Well Being in La Jolla, California, we have been
using rasayana preparations to enhance energy and vitality in our patients. We have separate formulations for men and women and are encouraged by
the subjective reports of our patients. Further information on how to access
these formulations is provided in Appendix A. QUIZ: HOW WELL AM I AGING. There is no separate “life extension” program in Ayurveda, for the simple
reason that all of its approaches—diet, exercise, daily and seasonal routines,
meditation, and the various healing techniques—are meant to enhance
longevity. Considering the superior health of our patients today, we have
every hope that a breakthrough in aging has been made. The classic
Ayurvedic texts define one hundred years as a normal life span without
infirmity or disease. We are aiming for at least that. Can you prove to yourself that you are getting younger by following this
program. Simple as it sounds, feeling happy and healthy is one good
yardstick; being young at heart is recognized as a marker of long life. On amore objective basis, researcher s at Duke University have compiled a short
list of health factors correlated with longevity. Statistically speaking, people
who rate well on each of these points have the best chance of living longer
than average. The following quiz is based on the Duke inventory. The most precise way
to use it is in conjunction with a complete physical examination, but an
informal person al rating will still tell you a lot. Being as honest and
objective as you can, answer every question, giving yourself:
10 points for Excellent
5 points for Average
0 points for Below Average
Having arrived at a final score, follow Ayurveda for six months, then rate
yourself again. The chances are very good that you will notice a surprisingly
large improvement, and it is likely to occur well before the six months are
up. The following factors are listed in order of relative importance:To rate yourself: A perfec t score (90 points) indicates that you are very
likely to live longer, perhaps much longer, than the national average (roughly
age 78 for women and 72 for men). An above-average score (between 65 and
90) sugg ests that your life expectancy will be at least three years higher than
the natio nal norm, more if you are already past middle age. An average score
(45–65) indicates an average life expectancy. A below-average score (below
40) indicates that you need to pay more attention to your health. It is not a
cause for panic, because following the programs of Ayurveda should lead to
noticeable improvements very quickly. To gain a more accurate idea of where you stand, you can refine your
score by considering a few other factors:
Age: High scores mean more as you get older. If you are over 50, a score
in the 75–90 range indicates an enhanced likelihood of long life; the same
score would not be as significant if you are only 30. Lifestyle habits: All thing s being equal, regular habits are correlated with
long life; these include eating three meals a day, getting eight hours of sleep
each night, going to bed on time, and so on. Also, being married is indicative
of a longer life expectancy than being single. Alcohol consumption should
be minimal or none; alcoholism is known to reduce life expectancy. Weight: Maintaining an ideal weight is best, although there is no harm in
being ten to fifteen pounds overweight. Life span is shortene d if you are
obese (15 percent or more over your ideal weight) or if your weight has
fluctuated drastically over a period of years. HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR SCORE
As a result of the extensive research done on meditation, we can validate
that our Ayurvedic program may improve each of the Duke University
longevity factor s. If we place the results in the context of Ayurveda as a
whole, they become even stronger. Research with rasayanas suggests that they may of fset several
deleterious aspects of the aging process, including a beneficial ef fect on
blood clotting, and a reduced susceptibility to carcinogens. Preliminary
studies suggest that rasayanas may be ef fective as free radical
scavengers that would positively impact the aging process. A pilot study on the ef fects of panchakarma suggests that this
purification procedure enhances the rejuvenating ef fect of meditation
(ten meditating subjects became on average six years younger
biologically over the period of a year while taking regular
panchakarma, as opposed to one and a half years with meditation
alone). What all of this implies is that a complete Ayurvedic program should be
even more effective than meditation by itself, and in fact may lead to all the
powerful rejuvenating effects promised in the ancient texts. A basic program
would include meditation, the appropriate Ayurvedic body-type diet,
supplemented with rasayanas, regular exercise, panchakarma treatment atleast once a year, and the major points given in the daily routine, or
dinacharya, to be discussed in chapter 1 1. OceanofPDF. comPART II
LIVING IN TUNE WITH NATURE
OceanofPDF. comCHAPTER 10
THE IMPULSE TO EVOL VE
The phrase “living in tune with nature” means something very precise in
Ayurveda: havin g healthy desires that match what you actually need. As
nature made you, what you need and what you want should not conflict. This is because all desires originate at the quantum level, as faint vibrations
whose dynamic interaction is always balanced. If either the body or the
mind tip out of balance, a correcting impulse is sent from the quantum
body, and you register it as something you desire. At this moment, millions of impulses are flowing through your nervous
system, turning into all the actions you perform every day. To want a drink
of water, for example, satisfies the separate need of 50 trillion cells in your
body, each of which sends a message to be decoded by special receptors in
the hypothalamus. In turn, the hypothalamus makes the mind body
connection by manufacturing the specific neurotransmitters, or messenger
molecules, that make you think, “I’m thirsty. ”
A natural desire of any kind takes a similar path. A need arises
somewhere in the quantum mechanical body, the mind body connection is
made in the brain, and then you experience an impulse to act. As long as
needs and desires match, you are living in tune with nature; the path of
desire is not blocked. Ideally, every bite of food you eat should taste
delicious to you and at the same time satisfy a precise demand for nutrients. Your skin may be asking for extra vitamin C to repair damage from a
sunburn, a stressed hipbone may be asking for extra calcium, a flexed arm
muscle for more potassium. Unfortunately, it is very easy to interfere with this pathway, and when we
do so, we slip out of tune with nature. Instead of trusting the balanced body
to tell us what nutrients it needs, all too often we indiscrim inately takevitamins, compulsively overeat, crave far too many sweets and junk foods
of all kinds. The current vogue of “life extension” is based on distrust of the
body, trying to second-guess its weaknesses by cramming it with
megadoses of vitamin E, beta-carotene, selenium, or whatever new
nutriceutical has joined the list. It has not been proved that taking supplementary vitamins and minerals
alone prolongs life. On the contrary, separate studies conducted in Southern
California showed that older people who obsessively take vitamins and eat
only “health food” do not live any longer than average, while people who
have balanced lifestyle habits (going to bed on time, eating three meals a
day, drinking alcohol only very moderately, and so on) live up to eleven
years longer than the norm. You do not have to go to an extreme to get the most from your body. The
body is intellige nt. At the quan tum level, it knows exactly what it needs,
down to the last atom and molecule of food, the faintest breath you breathe,
the smallest action you take. In the following chapters, I outline the kind of
foods, exercise, and daily and seasonal routines that Ayurveda considers in
tune with nature. Although very specific, these guidelines are not rules but
pointers to put you in touch with your quantum mechanical body. Once you
are back in touch, action goes much more smoothly, correct choices become
more automatic, and mistakes become less frequent. Before getting into specifics, though, I’d like to say more about the
evolutionary path itself. MAKING RIGHT CHOICES
To conti nue evolving and progressing in life, you must make the right
choices for yourself, day after day, minute after minute. The choices are
endless because the challenges of life are endless, so to avoid all the wrong
choices seems impossible. But Ayurveda says that in fact it is easy—once
you begin to listen to your own deepest nature. For every decision you make, major or mundane, your quantum
mechanical body sees only one correct choice, although your mind might
recognize many. This confusion gives rise to internal conflict. Why does a
smoker compulsively reach for another cigarette, knowing the harm it can
do. Why does a compulsive eater take second helpings in the absence of
hunger. Wrestling with these conflicts is futile— our actions are based on
too many individual processes, all of them changing all the time. Defeating
lethal viruses or bacteria is child’s play compared with trying to defeat
people’ s self-destructive habits. For example, we all know chronically
overweight people who have turned everywhere for a cure, to drugs,
psychiatry, beha vior modificat ion, and even surgery, with little or no
success. In Ayurveda we propose a simpler solution. Instead of wrestling with all
the wrong choices people are likely to make in the grip of unhealthy
desires, we put our patients in touch with the source of their desires. At the
source, everyone has healthy desires. In Sanskrit, this is called sattva, a
word often translated as “purity. ” A better translation of sattva is “the
impulse to evolve,” and I will demonstrate why. In Ayurveda there are three natural impulses at work in any given
situation. One is sattva, the impulse to evolve, to go forward, to progress. The second impulse is tamas, the exact opposite, the impulse to stay the
same or to regress. Fixed between these two opposites is rajas, a more
neutral impulse that dictates action for its own sake. A diagram of the three
looks like this:
As you can see, rajas poses the question, “How should I act in this
situation. ” Sattv a favors the choice that is evolutionary, tamas the one that
is stable. All three impulses are necessary to life. If you are sittin g up late at
night, tempted to watch the second late movie on TV, one impulse tells you
to go to bed, while its opposite tells you to continue sitting there. This is
sattva and tamas in conflict, with rajas acting as the spur, urging you to
choose. Nature has made us so that our minds instinctively operate according to
these three guna s, or tendencies (they are also sometimes called “the mental
doshas”). People can be classified according to which of these three gunas
is generally dominant. Rajasic people like to act. Their minds work constantly and tend towar d
impatience, impulsiveness, and kinetic outlets of all kinds. Sattvic people like to progress. Their minds do not dwell on action for its
own sake, but only on action that is cr eative, life-supporting, and healthy. Tamasic people like to stay the same. Their minds do not like to act; they
enjoy set r outines and tend towar d the status quo. These types are not cut and dried, since everyone contains elements of
each. But all of us know pure rajasic types— extroverted, endlessly full of
energy, people who rush in where angels fear to tread. And we know pure
tamasic types—slow to move, resistant to new ideas, hard-core
traditionalists for whom the best things in life are always in the past. (Ayurvedic doctors who come to America from India often shake their
heads and say that we are a hopelessly rajasic people, whose creativity and
ambition need more of the gentl e, purifying element of sattva. ) However we
were shaped by nature, becomin g more sattvic is a worthwhile goal, for it is
sattva that makes a person more creative, healthier, and happier. The secret of sattvic people is that they have naturally healthy desires. Unhealthy desir es can arise in anyone because of mental ama. You will
remember that “mental ama” is the term used for impurities, or negativetendencies in the mind. Sattva is the force of purity that combats them. The
Ayurvedic sages say that mental ama is produced by:
Negative emotions—anger, fear, self-criticism, greed, resentment
Psychological stress—family problems, tensions at work, loss of
money or job, divorce, death in the family
Lethar gy, mental inertia
Unwholesome surroundings
Contact with other people’ s negativity
Violent, crude, or shocking books or other forms of entertainment
The debate over whether it is morally right to show violence on
television misse s the essential point, according to Ayurveda. The issue is
one of health. The sight of violence gets translated into unhealth y chemicals
in the body, leading to the buildup of ama in our thoughts as well as in our
cells. Everyone has a right to expose himself to any kind of influence he
wants, but the physician’ s role is to warn against those influences that
damage our well-being. Avoiding mental ama is therefore considered a
preventive measure against the imbalances that lead ultimately to disease. You cannot force your body to make evolutionary choices. If you are
eating the wrong foods, chain-smoking, drinking excessively, or making
any other kind of unhealthy choice in your daily life, some block exists
somewhere in your pathway of desire. Some impurity is keepin g you away
from your quantum self. I have already given many techniques for
removing such blockages. All of these, from panchakarma to meditation to
the bliss technique, remove tremendous amounts of impurity every time you
use them. After a while, as you continue using the Ayurvedic techniques, you will
see your sattvic side emer ge, no matter how blocked your system was to
begin with. When that happen s, you are approaching the place calledperfect health. Sattva lies closest to nature’ s heart, because everything in
nature expands, evolves, and grows. Sattva exists in us as our instinct for
balance, our life-enhancing attitudes, our innate dignity and respect for
others, and our love. As you increase in sattva, you effortlessly live in purity
and move in the direction of higher evolution. Then and only then does the
phrase “living in tune with nature” reveal its real meaning. HOW TO INCREASE SA TTV A
Ayurveda says that many different kinds of influences can increase
sattva, while at the same time keeping ama at a minimum. Some
recommendations are familiar to us: consuming pure food and water,
avoiding obvious toxins such as pesticides, and getting a full night’ s sleep. Adequate rest is needed to bring out the clear, happy side of the mind. Spend time outside in nature, walking in the woods and mountains or
beside the ocean, lakes, and streams; listen to the sound of the wind, the
rustling of the trees, and the songs of birds—all of these purify the senses
and bring them back to their source in nature. In Ayurveda we consider
anything that is life-supporting to be sattvic, so nurturing positive emotions
and secure relationships is vital—the absence of love and care from your
life will damage sattva far more than any wrong diet. In addition, the following pointe rs, established thousands of years ago in
the Vedic texts and echoed in the purest traditions of every culture, serve as
time-tested guides for increasing sattva in daily life:
Be pleasant and tolerant toward everyone. Act on due reflection, not on impulse. Refrain from anger or criticism, even when you feel it is justified
(sattvic people do not point out others’ weaknesses “for their own
good”). Take time every day for play, humor, relaxation, and good company. Wake with the sun in the morning, watch the sun set in the evening,
and occasionally stroll in the moonlight, especially if there is a full
moon. Eat light, natural foods, favoring milk, saf fron, rice, and ghee (clarified
butter)—a complete list of sattvic foods is given on page 307, along
with the deeper rationale for adhering to a pure diet. Be generous with others in every way—giving presents and
compliments to people around you, pointing out the best in everyone,
letting others make you great instead of trying to be great yourself. To
a sattvic person, all relationships exist primarily as an opportunity to
give. The complement to this basic attitude is that nature will always
provide enough to fulfill one’ s needs. When this kind of generosity and
trust truly blossoms, a sattvic person has nothing to fear from life and
everything to receive from it; he can let life happen without forcing it. | [
{
"A": "The text does not discuss the difference between a cell and DNA. However, it does mention that cells remember experiences and can lose their skills if their innate knowledge is lost or damaged, and that DNA is used to form arteries, which are capable of perfect functioning even after 50,000 years.",
"Q": "According to the text, what is the difference between a cell and a DNA?"
},
{
"A": "The text does not explicitly state the purpose of Ayurvedic herbs, but it does mention that they are used to \"nourish the essence of life\" and can be used to correct imbalances in the body.",
"Q": "What is the purpose of Ayurvedic herbs?"
},
{
"A": "The text does not explicitly state the primary goal of Ayurvedic medicine, but it does emphasize the importance of living in harmony with nature and making choices that align with one's natural doshas.",
"Q": "What is the primary goal of Ayurvedic medicine, as described in the text?"
},
{
"A": "The text suggests that the body and mind are interconnected, and that the mind can influence the body's functioning. It also mentions that the body's natural rhythms should be respected and not forced, and that the body knows what it needs and can respond to the correct food and environment.",
"Q": "What is the relationship between the body and the mind, according to Ayurvedic principles?"
},
{
"A": "The text recommends a diet that is warm, nourishing, and oily to balance Vata dosha. It suggests avoiding cold, light, and low-calorie foods, and instead recommends eating warm, nourishing foods such as oatmeal, soup, and cooked grains.",
"Q": "What is the recommended diet for someone with a Vata imbalance?"
}
] |
Warm milk before going to
bed is a good idea, but eating very late at night is not—it may help you
fall asleep, but your body will feel worse in the morning. Lassi, a traditional Indian drink, is good for ridding the body of excess
Vata. To make it, whisk together one-half cup plain yogurt and one-half
cup water; flavor with a pinch of powdered ginger , salt, or cumin. Sweet mango lassi, made from equal parts yogurt and mango pulp
(fresh or canned) is particularly delicious and also balances Vata. For a
lighter beverage, either lassi can be diluted with between one-half and
one cup of water . One ef ficient and instant way to settle Vata is to
sprinkle a special spice powder , called a Vata churna, over your plate at
the table. An Internet source for churnas is on page 378. Vata-Pacifying FoodsDairyAll dairy is acceptable, unless you have a known lactase deficiency . Pitta-Pacifying Diet
Favor:
Cool or warm but not steaming-hot foods
Moderately heavy textur es
Bitter , sweet, and astringent tastes
Less butter and added fat
Pitta types are born with naturally strong, efficient digestion that remains
that way unless disturbed. They come closest to the ideal of being able to eat
a little of everything. Therefor e, they need to be careful to avoid dietary
abuses. The continued use of too much salt, overindulgence in sour and
spicy food, and overeating are the most common aggravating influences. Being the only hot dosha, Pitta appreciates cool foods, particularly in
summer . It is a good idea to be especially scrupulous about having bitter and
astringent tastes in your meals (supplied mainly through salads and
legumes). These two rasas curb the appetite, dry up excessive moisture, and
keep the palate sharp. They also counteract the dulling effect of too much
salt and sugar on the taste buds, making it easier for Pittas to be moderate in
their appetites, as nature intended them to be. Anything that makes dining a
more soothing and orderly experience will also help to pacify this dosha. The Pitta-pacify ing diet given below is the natural choice for Pitta types,
unless a Ayurvedically trained physician has indicated otherwi se. Our Pitta
patients report that they feel more balanced on this diet, still energetic but
with a “softer” energy. Their roaring appetites calm down, too. If you suffer
from mild symptoms of Pitta imbalance, such as heartburn, irritability , or
excessive thirst, this diet is also good. Try it for a month and see if your
symptoms are alleviated. Some general points to help you implement this diet are as follows. Cool, refreshing food is best for Pitta types in summer , with a decrease
in salt, oil, and spices, all of which are heating to the body . Salads
contain two tastes, bitter and astringent, that balance Pitta and are also
cold and light. Milk and ice cream are good, too. Excessive Pitta makes the body too sour; to counteract this, you should
generally avoid pickles, yogurt, sour cream, and cheese. Fresh lemon
juice is an exception and can be used, sparingly , instead of vinegar in
your salad dressings. Fermented foods and alcoholic beverages are
aggravating to Pitta because of their sourness, as are the acids in cof fee. Learning to drink herb tea, either mint, licorice root, or the specialPitta-pacifying tea you can order (see page 378), will often make a big
difference in smoothing your moods. A breakfast of cold cereal, cinnamon toast, and apple juice is a good
replacement for cof fee, doughnut, and orange juice, all of which disturb
Pitta. The fat in red meat, which also heats the body , is not needed by Pitta
people. Although they like to eat meat, particularly if they are high-
powered movers and shakers, Pittas do better on a vegetarian diet than
any other body type. If you are not vegetarian, make sure that your diet
includes abundant amounts of milk, grains, and vegetables. All of these
make Pittas feel extremely good. Once they become accustomed to
health-food restaurants, Pittas like them better than their old steak
houses because they feel calmer and more satisfied afterward. Fried foods are oily , hot, salty , and heavy , all qualities that Pittas need
to avoid. On the other hand, starchy foods—vegetables, grains, and
beans—are satisfying and cut ravenous Pitta hunger . The steady ener gy
of a high-carbohydrate diet will counteract the tendency to overeat
under stress. Processed and fast foods lean heavily on salt and sour tastes; it is a
good idea for Pitta types to avoid them as much as possible. Since Pittas
are fond of luxury , a subdued, elegant restaurant brings out the best in
them. Japanese and Chinese food, being relatively low in fat and meat,
are good choices for Pittas. When you eat out, order cool, not iced,
water , take salad instead of hot soup, have the bread with a small
amount of butter , and feel free to order dessert. Spicy food is too
intoxicating to Pitta; if you like Mexican food, minimize the cheese and
sour cream, and have a cool guacamole salad to counteract the heavy
aggravation of Pitta caused by chilies. Pittas respond well to low-salt diets, but if forced to eat tasteless food,
they will quickly rebel. Keeping salt of f the table and adding it only in
the kitchen while you cook is a good compromise. Cocktail hour with
salty snacks is worse for Pitta types than anyone else. The dry , saltyfood and the alcohol combine to inflame their appetites and stomach
linings. To bring down aggravated Pitta, a standard recommendation is to take
two teaspoons of ghee (clarified butter) in a glass of warm milk. This
also acts as a laxative, which helps flush excess Pitta from the system. Have your ghee and milk in place of dinner or two hours after a light
dinner . You can also have it in place of breakfast. (Do not take ghee,
however , if you have a problem with elevated cholesterol.) One ef ficient and instant way to settle Pitta is to sprinkle a special spice
powder , called a Pitta churna, over your plate at the table. An Internet
source for churnas is on page 378. Pitta-Pacifying Foods
SweetenersAll sweeteners are acceptable, except honey and molasses. Plus small amounts of cumin and black pepperKapha is a slow dosha to be affected by food, but over time, Kapha types
become imbalan ced as a result of eating too many sweet, rich foods. Other
problems can develop, but in Western society , where sugar and fat account
for more than half of the calories consumed by the average person, Kaphas
have to be on guard against this influence. Salt also needs to be watched,
since it too is greatly overused and promotes fluid retention in many Kaphas. Anything that increases lightness should be favored—a small, light meal
at breakfast and dinner , lightly cooked foods (no deep-frying), raw fruits and
vegetables. Eating spicy food will promote better digestion and warm your
body; bitter and astringent foods will help to curb your appetite. In general,
anything that makes eating stimulating will help balance Kapha and avert the
danger , ever -present with most Kapha types, of overindulging at the table. The Kapha-pacifying diet given below is the natural choice for Kapha
body types, unless contrary advice has been given by a Ayurvedically trained
physician. Switc hing to this diet helps many of our Kapha patients feel more
balanced, energetic, lighter , and happier about themselves. If you suffer from
mild symptoms of Kapha imbalance, such as a stuffed or runny nose, being
slow to start in the morning, or oversleeping, this diet is also good. Try it for
six weeks and see if your symptoms are alleviated. The following suggestions will help people implement a Kapha-pacifying
diet. Given a choice, pick hot food over cold at every meal—a hot luncheon
entree instead of a sandwich, hot apple pie instead of ice cream, grilledfish instead of tuna salad. Warming up cold Kapha digestion is always
good for balance. Dry cooking methods (baking, broiling, grilling,
sautéing) are better for Kaphas than moist ones (steaming, boiling,
poaching). Before you eat, stimulate your appetite with bitter or pungent tastes
instead of salty or sour . The bitterness of romaine lettuce, endive, or
tonic water will wake up your taste buds without encouraging you to
overeat. Ginger tea or even a pinch of fresh gingerroot is also highly
recommended. In general, you want to be sure that bitter and astringent
tastes are present in every meal. To get them, it is not necessary to seek
out bitter food in quantity . A little bitterness in a salad or the
astringency of herbs supplies enough. Among the household spices,
cumin, fenugreek, sesame seed, and turmeric are both bitter and
astringent. Adding pungent tastes to your diet with spices is one of the best ways to
balance Kapha. Anything spicy is good, including very hot Mexican or
Indian food that makes your eyes water . This action flushes out all the
mucous membranes. Contrary to what we tend to think, hot, spicy food
is best not in the summer but in the winter; it of fsets the cold, damp
quality that Kapha resents. Kaphas need to eat breakfast mainly to get them started in the morning,
not for solid nourishment. Rather than relying on a jolt of caf feine from
coffee, wake your body up with light, Kapha-reducing foods, such as
hot spiced cider , buckwheat pancakes with apple butter , corn muf fins,
and bitter cocoa made with skim milk and a touch of honey . In general,
anything hot and light is good, while anything cold, heavy , or sweet is
not so good. Cold cereals, cold juice or milk, and sugary pastries tend to
create congestion, particularly in damp winter weather . Bacon and
sausage are Kapha-aggravating because of their salt and oil. If you
don’t feel hungry in the morning, it is all right to skip breakfast, which
Ayurveda considers optional, especially for Kapha types. If you wake up feeling congested in the morning, a sign of excess
Kapha, the best things to take are honey , hot water , lemon juice, andginger . Hot ginger tea (page 301) is excellent for Kapha types in
general, since it stimulates the system and flushes out excess Kapha. If
you occasionally skip a meal—a good idea for many Kaphas—a
spoonful of honey in hot water will tide you over . Cutting back on sweets is dif ficult for many Kaphas, but a trial week on
a low-sugar diet generally does result in feeling lighter and more
energetic. Honey is extensively recommended for Kapha types, but you
should not take more than a tablespoon or so per day; honey is not
suitable to cook with, either , since heating honey makes it
unwholesome, according to Ayurveda. Out-of-balance Kapha types overindulge in dairy products, but butter ,
ice cream, and cheese are among the worst for you, since they make
your system colder and more congested. Low-fat milk is best,
preferably pre-boiled to aid digestion, with only a minimum of other
dairy products. Sesame seeds on rolls and bread help to counteract the
sweet, heavy quality of the wheat, which is not the best for Kapha,
either . Because they combine too much heavy sweetness, a hambur ger
and milkshake, or even a sandwich with milk, should be eaten only
infrequently . Raw fruits, vegetables, and salads are extremely good, since their fiber
tones the intestinal tract, in addition to the benefits of their astringent
tastes. Generally speaking, Ayurveda prefers all food cooked, but we
find that this is an exception that helps most Kapha types. Deep-fried foods of any kind will aggravate Kapha; they are among the
few things you should try to eliminate from your diet. There is no need
to banish all fats, but make an ef fort to use less butter and oil in your
cooking. Corn oil is heating to the body; it is a good choice for you in
small quantities, along with almond and sunflower oils. Crisp-steamed
vegetables with a little ghee (clarified butter) drizzled over them is
good for a light supper; anything crisp, fresh, and stimulating balances
Kapha.Restaurant food has to be carefully chosen by Kapha people. Fast food
is far too oily , salty , and sweet—head for the salad bar and use a
minimum of salad dressing. If you are eating out in better restaurants,
Oriental cooking is the lightest, particularly if you concentrate on more
vegetables than meat. Wherever you go, order a glass of hot water
instead of iced, take salad instead of hot soup (except in cold weather),
avoid the rolls and butter , and make dessert small and not too rich—hot
fruit pies are probably the best choice. One ef ficient and instant way to settle Kapha is to sprinkle a special
spice powder , called a Kapha churna, over your plate at the table. An
Internet source for churnas is on page 378. Kapha-Pacifying Foods
THE SIX TASTES
Each of the six tastes speaks directly to the quantum mechanical body , and
each carries a different message. Our tongues know this instinctively . The
voluptuous sweetness of vanilla custard is diametrically opposed to the bitterbite of lemon peel; one is soothing, the other is a shock. Your whole body
reacts to the difference, which begins on your tongue but continues
throughout your body . Taste leaves a trail of reactions from your mouth to
the food’ s final destination, your cells. Without knowing about nutritional balance in terms of fats, carbohydrates,
and proteins, native cultures around the world have realized that their diets
had to be dynamic. They had to have tastes that wake up the body , like bitter
and astringent, and others that soothe it, primarily sweet. Digestion
sometimes need ed to be increa sed with “hot” tastes—pungen t, sour, and
salty—and at other times decreased with “cold” tastes—bitter , astringent,
and sweet. All of this was understood instinctively . In Mexico, the limited fare of
corn and beans could not by itself have supported a healt hy, balanced
existence, but with the addition of red chilies, it has served the native people
for many centu ries. Red chili adds vitamin C to a diet, but the more
important additi on it brings are the sweet and pungent tastes that round out
the six rasas. Curry spices serve the same purpose in India, where the staples
of rice, lentils, and wheat bread would be dramatically limited without them. MESSAGES FROM NA TURE
Every food has its own profile of tastes. Simple foods, such as white sugar
or vineg ar, have only one taste, but most others have at least two: lemon is
sour, but also sweet and bitter; carrots are sweet, bitter , and astringent;
cheese is sweet and sour. Milk is considered a complete food, having the
subtle presence of all six rasas besides its obvious sweetness; for this reason,
Ayurveda recommends drinking milk alone rather than combin ing it with a
meal. (Having milk with other sweet foods—fruit, grains, and sugar—is
good, however; in fact, milk is the best buffer for refined white sugar , which
enters the system in a rush if digested alone.) The major food groups all revolve around the rasa of sweet, but with the
five other tastes carefully blended in:Fruits—primarily sweet and astringent, with citrus fruits adding sour
Vegetables—primarily sweet and astringent, with leafy gr eens adding bitter
Dairy—primarily sweet, with yogurt and cheese adding sour and astringent
Meat—primarily sweet and astringent
Oils—primarily sweet
Grains and Nuts—primarily sweet
Legumes—primarily sweet and astringent
Herbs and Spices—primarily pungent, with all other flavors added
secondarily
Just as most foods are sweet, so is Kapha dosha, the builder of tissues; the
human body as a whole is therefore sweet, too. Herbs and spices fill in the
spectrum of tastes, but, more important, they evoke a complete range of
bodily responses. Black pepper makes your mouth water , fenugreek dries it
up; mustard heats the body , mint cools it off. The only blank space is salt,
which is provided by salt itself. Using its taste profile, every food can be described as either increasing or
decreasing one or more dosha s, as we saw. Since the three doshas are
connected, an increase of one is so crucial that Ayurveda has described every
food according to whether it will increase or decrease a particular dosha. Cabbage, for instance, is known to increase Vata, onions to increase Pitta, all
oils to increase Kapha. Considering that half a dozen messages are being relayed to the body
simultaneously by any one food, you can get just as strong a headache
computing the six rasas as trying to compute every gram of fat,
carbohydrate, and protein. This complex job belongs to a Ayurvedic doctor . To him, food is medicine, and its properties must be scrutinized as closely as
any other medic ine. He needs to know that cabbage is sweet and astringent,
dry and cooling, and therefore a strong aggravator of Vata (that is whycabbage tends to form gas in the colon, the seat of Vata). He would then be
able to prescribe an offsetting food (such as fennel) to counteract Vata
aggravation. He also knows that every food delivers an “aftertaste” (vipak ) that affects
the body once the food has been digested. Cabbage’ s aftertaste is pungent,
for example. Vipak is an important consideration when a doctor is
prescribing a therapeutic diet, because he needs to know every aspect of the
food that is affecting his patient’ s doshas. At home you do not have to be so
specific. The aftertaste of food once it has been digested is something we
will leave to the doctor , but for the sake of completion, vipak is classified as
follows:
Sweet and salty tastes lead to sweet vipak
Sour taste leads to sour vipak
Pungent, bitter , and astringent tastes lead to pungent vipak
Thus the six tastes are reduced to three after digestion is completed. In the following pages we delve more deeply into the six rasas and what
they say to your doshas. I hope you will read this section at least once, but
do not memorize it. Your taste buds, not your mind, should be the final judge
of taste. Sweet is a taste that strongly increases Kapha. Eating sweet foods will
bring on Kapha qualities in the body—coldness, heaviness (by adding fat),
steadiness, and physical energy. Just as Kapha people are naturally the mosteasily satisfied, sweet is the most satisfying taste. It is very Kapha to be
sweet-natured and motherly—from childhood on, two Kapha foods, milk
and sugar , represent motherlines s. Any food that feels nourishin g and brings
satisfaction generally has a sweet component. For instance, all meats, oils,
and most grains are considered sweet. Ayurveda looks upon rice and wheat,
the two grains that are the staff of life in the East and West, as sweet in taste. Ghee (clarified butter) is another sweet food, being derived from milk; it is
considered the best remedy for balancing Pitta. Sweet foods are also soothing and relieve thirst. If you are in a nervous,
unsettled mood, which is a sign of aroused Vata, sweet will calm you; it also
puts out the fire of Pitta (an angry baby is pacified by givin g it milk or
sugar). However , too much sugar is not stabilizing; it makes the mind dull
and drow sy. Complacency , greed, and emotional dependency come from too
much sweet. Too much sweet becomes cloying. It leads to negative qualities that come
from pushing Kapha too far: sluggishness, overweight, mental dullness,
excess mucus, congestion, and sleepiness. Kapha people are endowed with
qualities of satisfaction and well-being that Vata and Pitta types have to seek
through sweet tastes. However , in the case of any Kapha imba lance, sweet
foods are considered undesirab le and should be reduced or avoided. Only
honey is an exception to this rule. It is better than any other sweet food for
balancing Kapha. Salt increases both Pitta and Kapha. It sparks digestion, a Pitta function. Its taste adds savor to food, stokes the appetite, and starts the flow of saliva
and stom ach juices. Salt is hot like Pitta (all the digestive processes heat up
the body). Too much of it, however , and the other tastes are overwhelmed,
making nothing taste good. The Kapha connection is through two otherqualities Ayurveda associates with salt—oiliness and heaviness. By attaching
itself to water molecules, salt makes your tissues heavier . Excessive salt will
make it harder to control food cravings, which Kapha types must do to
remain on a balanced diet. By making you eat too much, salt adds fat and
leads to overweight. In the West, the connection between salt and hypertension has been
convincing enough that many patients with high blood pressure have been
forbidden to eat any but the smallest amounts of salt. This implied that salt
was somehow an enemy . Now it is known that such restrictions were too
severe—a norm al person can eat moderate amounts of salt without harm to
his blood pressu re. The basic reason not to overindulge is that a moderate
diet promotes health in every way, not just by averting hypertension. Ayurveda would point out that salt doesn’ t raise blood pressure , the doshas
do. It takes a dosha imbalance before the salt will do any harm. Too much salt also leads to Pitta-related skin inflammation, acne, and
overheating. If there is a Pitta or Kapha imbalance in the body , salty food is
considered undesirable. Emotionally , salt gives life its zest, but too much salt nullifies this effect,
just as too many potato chips kills the appetite instead of stimulates it. If you
overuse salt, it takes more and more of it to register at all—this is why salty
foods are compulsive. Excess salt in general is associated with cravings and
compulsive desires. Like salt, sour is a Pitta-Kapha taste that sparks the digestion and adds
savor to food. It is refreshing to eat sour food, but it increases thirst, which is
connected to Pitta—the heat generated by extra Pitta has to be slaked with
lots of water . Sour food can therefore add to fluid retention, making the body
heavier (more Kapha). Pitta’ s sharp qualities, such as sharp intellect and
wittiness, are increased by sour foods, but “turning sour” is also possible,
since too much Pitta is connected with resentment and envy , popularly called
“sour grapes.”
Cheese and yogurt derive their sourness from fermentation. In small
quantities, sour foods make the digestive juices flow. However , Ayurveda is
distinctly opposed to fermented sourness in general—vinegar and fermented
alcohol are considered toxic, reflecting the Pitta-Kapha quality of this taste. Out-of-balance Pitta brings toxicity to the blood; out-of-balance Kapha
makes the tissues stagnant with ama. Excess of sour foods leads to acidic difficulties in the body , such as ulcers,
disturbed blood chemistry , skin irritations, and heartburn. If there is a Pitta
or Kaph a imbalance in the body already , sour foods are considered
undesirable. Fermented foods are undesirable at any time except in small
amounts. Bitter is the most Vata of tastes, being light, cold, and dry in its effects on
the body . It is a corrective taste, bringing the cravings for sweet, sour, andspicy foods back into balance. Bitter quickens the palate by waking it up, not
by satisfying it, a very Vata property , since Vata is responsible for alertness. A dash of bitters or a glass of tonic water is effective in getting the digestion
going for people with slow digestion; the bitterness instantly makes the
palate want the more satisfying tastes. Bitter tones the tissues, a proper ty that gave tonic water its name. Bitter is
the best taste, along with sweet, for cooling you off in hot weather . When the
body has beco me toxic, inflamed, hot, or itchy as a result of Pitta
aggravation, bitter is considered the best corrective. (Bitter quinine bark
soothes fever , for example.) In excess, bitter aggravates Vata, leading to typical Vata complaints—loss
of appet ite, weight loss, headaches, unsteadiness, dry skin, and a hollow
feeling of weakness. The braci ng alertness associated with bitter turns to
bitter feelings in excess, associated with lack of satisfaction—anything that
is too Vata is not satisfying, because Vata’s nature is constantly to seek
change. Grief, which destroys the balance of Vata and makes life seem
completely without satisfaction, is bitter . In Ayurveda, hot, spicy food is considered to have its own taste, called
pungent. Pungen cy is immediately recognizable because it causes a burning
sensation (the increased Pitta) and thirst (the drying effect of increased Vata). Pungency heats up the body and makes fluids flow out of it. As a result,
digestion is increased and congested tissues are cleaned out. Sweat, tears,
saliva, mucus, and the blood all start flowing when pungency is present.Because it flushes out your sinus cavities, pungent food is the best for
balancing Kapha, which when aggravated leads to congestion of mucous
membranes. Western medicine long thought that spicy food must be bad for
anyone with irritated mucous membranes, but the effect of opening and
flushing out the tissues is now considered extremely beneficial; sufferers of
chronic bronchitis and asthma have sometimes been put on Mexican food
laden with chili pepper . The antitoxic effect of pungent is said to help clear
the skin, even though Pitta is increased—the Vata dryness clean s out the oily
pores that exacerbate acne. In excess, pungency turns to pain—eating a raw chili causes swollen lips
and eyes, burni ng skin, and hot sweat. Too much spicy food makes you
overly thirsty , dizzy , and unsett led, reflecting the Vata influence (too much
Vata makes for light-headednes s and dryness). The sharpness of pungent, if
pushed too far , will not excite the body but irritate it. The same is true of the emotio ns. Pungent humor is invigorating, but it
can also be sharp and hurtful. Excitable, extroverted people are already
inclined to be pungent—if you add more, they turn feverish. If a Vata or Pitta
imbalance is present in the body , pungent food is not desirable. Astringent, the taste that makes your mouth dry and puckered, is the least
familiar of the six rasas. It is an alkaline taste, equal but opposite to the
puckering of sour lemons. Like bitter , astringent is Vata—the gas produced
by boile d cabbage and the dry, mealy taste of beans are both Vata effects. Astringency is light like bitter but more appetizing; traditional cultures
around the world have subsisted on beans, and in the Middle Ages, cabbagewas a staple food throughout Europe. Astringency is settling; potatoes,
carrots, and other earthy foods bring out this satisfying ef fect. Astringent is cooling and constr ictive; it stops the flow of secretions such
as sweat and tears (making beans a good pairing for chili peppe rs, since they
offset each other). In excess, its constricting effect may lead to Vata
complaints of constipation and dry mouth, along with gas or distension in
the lower abdomen. People who have a dry wit are astringent. It is a quality that dampens
excitement and brings you back to yourself. Taken too far, however ,
astringency becomes shriveling. The sudden constriction when you are
seized by fear and the dry mouth that anxiety brings are both negative
astringent qualities. Astringent emotions lack warmth in general; to be old,
cold, and shriveled up is what makes people into old prunes if they age
badly . If there is a Vata imbalance in the body , astringent food is undesirable. AGNI—THE DIGESTIVE FIRE
Most people have never consulted a physician about their digestion. As a
society used to good health, we take for granted our ability to process food,
and, in the absence of a seriou s problem like peptic ulcers or colitis, we
ignore the occasional upset stomach or uncomfortable night spent after
“eating the whole thing.”
Ayurveda, on the other hand, considers poor digestion a major factor in
the disea se process and extols good digestion as the giver of health. Every
cell has been created from food. If the food has been used well, then the cells
will be built well; if it has been used badly , then the disease process has
already started. The Ayurvedic sages liked to say that if you could digest it
properly , poison would be good for you, while with poor digestion, a person
can die from drinking nectar . DIGESTION AND THE DOSHASAyurveda says that there are no absolutely good or bad foods, only food
that is good or bad for you. Being able to extract every life-giving value
from what you eat is of the utmost importance. People are not born equal in
this regard— the three major body types have very different powers of
digestion. Vata digestion tends to be variable and often delicate. Pitta digestion tends to be str ong and intense. Kapha digestion tends to be slow and often heavy . As with everyth ing that the doshas touch, each style of digest ion has its
advantages and drawbacks. Vatas may not be thrilled to discover that they
tend to have delicate or unreliable digestion, but this makes them more
discriminating eaters, and they rarely have to worry about the runaway
appetites of Pittas or the discouraging slide into overweight experienced by
many Kaphas. The important thing is to make maximum use of the digestion
you were born with and improve it as much as possible. The digestive tract not only extracts nutrition for your body , it is highly
responsive to your emotions. Your “gut feelings” have been put there by
nature so that the mind and body can communicate. Vata imbalance often
shows up as disturbed feelings that create pain in the intestines. Pitta dosha
is responsible for correct metabolism and “pure blood” (absence of toxins) ;
it is also the dosha that controls the proper rate of digestion. This is called
agni, or “the digestive fire.”
Agni is one of the most impor tant principles in Ayurveda, equal to the
doshas. A primary sign of good health is that your agni is burnin g bright, that
is, you are digesting your food efficiently , distributing all the necessary
nutrients to every cell, and burning off waste products without leaving
deposits of toxins. Therefore, by balancing agni, one keeps all these things in
balance at the same time. Nature has set up everyone’ s body in such a way that agni follo ws a cycle
throughout the day; unless agni’ s daily rhythm is correctly set, digestion willsuffer. One of the most valuable things to know is how to reset a flickering
agni and coax it back into its natural groove. HOW TO RESET AGNI
Agni’ s daily rhythm rises and falls, making you slightly hungry in the
morning, very hungry at noon, and moderately hungry in the early evening. In between these times, agni shuts down your appetite so that it can proceed
to diges t the food you have already eaten. When your stomach is empty
again, agni renews your appetite once more. If this basic cycle is thrown off, the body becomes confused—ap petite and
digestion start to overlap. Your agni will tell you if this has happened by a
wide range of symptoms:
Heartburn and acid stomach
Fluttering stomach or nervous digestion
Loss of appetite at mealtimes
Constipation or diarrhea
Lack of interest in food
Overweight or underweight
Serious digestive disorders: irritable bowel syndrome, ulcers,
diverticulitis, et cetera
The first and most important thing to do if any of these symptoms appears
is to reset your agni to its natura l cycle. It is also a good idea to do this just
to tone your digestion, even if you have no digestive problems. Vata types can reset agni once a month.Pitta types can reset agni twice a month (it is also good to do it when ever
your appetite has become ravenous and you begin to overeat). Kapha types can reset agni up to once a week, unless there are serious
digestive compl aints. Kapha dosha benefits from this routine more than the
other doshas, since digestion tends to be heavy and slow . No matter what your body type, do not attempt to reset your agni if you
are feeling sick. Being sick usually indicates that agni is down (or at least
not running correctly); that is not a good time to be tampering with it. If you
have an ulcer , colitis, or any other serious digestive complaint , do not restart
agni, except under a doctor ’s care. The method for resetting agni is as follows:
Weekend Pr ogram
It takes roughly two days to reset agni. Since rest is one of the
requirements on the day you do not eat, doing the program over the weekend
is best for most people. FRIDA Y ROUTINE
Eat normally at breakfast and lunch. Do not have an afternoon snack or
any alcohol after noon. Eat a light dinner of nourishing food, making sure
that it is satisfyi ng but not heavy; exclude spicy food and cheese . Just before
bedtime, take a laxative—three tablets of senna (Sennokot®), followed by a
small glass of hot water . Go to bed early . Some people will wake up during
the night for a bowel movement , others will wait until morning —either way
is normal. SATURDA Y ROUTINEBefore you can reset your agni, it is necessary first to lower it. This is
done by not eating meals and only drinking liquids during the day. Vata and
Pitta types shou ld drink fruit juice diluted with warm water . Apple or grape
juice are good; orange juice is too acidic. Drink one glass of juice at
breakfast, at lunch, and at dinnertime; three or four more can be taken
between meals, but do not drink more than that unless it’s water . The aim is
to have no appe tite and only a minimum of calories to digest. Kapha types
can follo w this routine or drink only warm water , if they are comfortable
with that. Spend the day reading, watchin g TV, or performing light activi ty. A short
walk in the morning and in the afternoon is a good idea. Do not travel any
distance or undertake heavy physical tasks. If you run or exercise heavily ,
skip it for a day and relax. If you feel faint with hunger , take one tables poon of honey with a glass of
warm water and lie down for five minutes. It is normal to feel lightness in your limbs, but if you start to tremble or
feel dizzy , lie down and rest. If the feeling persists, eat a small meal. You
may be unsettled from unusually high stress that has thrown you of f balance. SUNDA Y ROUTINE
Now you want to restart your agni and let it adjust itself to its normal
cycle. To do this, eat a light breakfast of hot cereal (oatmeal, cream of rice,
or cream of wheat) with a little butter , milk, and sugar . Herb tea is also good
in the morning to soothe the stomach—licorice root for Vatas, peppermint
for Pittas and Kaphas. If you followed the program correctly on Saturday ,
this will be all the breakfast you’ll want. If you still feel very hungry , have
more cereal or a glass of juice. Coffee, tea, and cigarettes will throw off your
agni rhythm and defeat your purpose. (Kapha types, who are slow starters in
the morning, can drink gotu kola tea as a stimulant—this herb is sold in
health-food stores.) Do not eat again until noon.At exactly noon, have a good lunch, one that satisfies you without being
heavy or immoderate. It is best not to excite your digestion with salty or
spicy food or alcohol, but do not have just a salad and water , either . Ginger
tea is a good idea. If you are Vata and have no appetite, drink it before the
meal; otherwise, during or after the meal is fine. If you do not have ginger
tea, sip a glass of warm water with your meal. Do not eat again until dinner . Have an early dinner (at least three hours before you go to bed), eating a
nourishing meal that suits your body type. Make this meal smaller than
lunch. Rice, lentils, and steamed vegetables are good. Even a repeat of
breakfast would be good for most Kaphas and Pittas, or for anyone who
tends to overeat. Now that your agni is reset, your hunger cycle will naturally tend to make
you want
a light breakfast
a substantial lunch, eaten at the same time every day
a light supper , eaten early and at the same time every day
The following things will throw your agni off again and should be
avoided. Eating between meals. The rule here is not to stimulate your appetite if
you are not going to eat. Agni likes to finish what it starts; therefore, it
is thrown of f by empty stimulation from chewing gum, hard candy , or
breath mints taken throughout the day . However , having tea and
cookies in the afternoon is a good idea for Vata types or for anyone who
gets fatigued at the end of the workday . Strong stimulants . Caf feine, salt, and alcohol are strong stimulants and
should be taken moderately . The indigestion most people feel at a
cocktail party comes from the mixing of salty food, alcohol, and noise.If you like to drink cof fee, always have it with food, not alone. The
same applies to salt and alcohol. Being addicted to any of these
stimulants makes it impossible to balance the digestion. Skipping meals. Agni wants something to do three times a day and
resents it if you do not eat. Kapha types can skip meals because their
agni moves slowly and burns low , but it is still a good rule to eat three
times a day . AGNI AND AMA
The Ayurvedic ideal is that agni be kept operating efficiently under all
conditions; it must not be so cold that food is not complete ly digested. Partially digeste d food turns into ama, a cold, foul-smelling residue whose
“stickiness” prevents the doshas from circulating freely as they should. There is also the opposite dange r that agni will burn too high, in which case
the nutrients in food will not be extracted but burned away . Then digestion
becomes feverish, leading to weakness instead of strength. Agni and ama form the most important pair of opposites in the body ,
making the difference between a state of dynamic health and a state of slow
deterioration. The most obviou s difference between the two is that agni
makes you feel well, while ama makes you feel sick. There are some specific
signs as well. Agni gives one:
Glowing complexion and bright eyes
Strong digestion without constipation or diarrhea
Ability to eat all foods
Clear , straw-colored urine
Normal feces without strong smellIf there is ama in the body , it can vary from a minor to a major serious
condition. Among the earlier signs are:
Dull skin and eyes
Unpleasant taste in the mouth, with coated tongue in the morning
Strong bad breath
Urine that is cloudy , dark, or discolored
Weak digestion, chronic constipation and/or diarrhea
Loss of appetite (food tastes bad)
Aching joints
Once the digestive fire has returned to normal and the collected ama from
the past is flush ed out, agni by itself will continue to purify the body . Your
digestion is self-correcting, because nature has set things up so that agni
burns ama. This is another example of how you can trust your body to know
what to do. IMPROVING YOUR AGNI
Certain foods, spices, and herbs are effective in improving the quality of
agni in everyone, according to Ayurveda. They are used to stimulate appetite,
increase the power of digestion, and remove ama. GINGER
Dried into a powder or used fresh, ginger is praised as the best spice for
helping the agni of all body types. Powdered ginger , sold in grocery-store
spice racks, is stronger , more drying, and more pungent than fresh
gingerroot, which is sold in the fresh produce department (or in health-foodstores if your supermarket does not carry it). Fresh ginger is considered the
better digestive aid. Ginger can be used in various ways:
As a tea. Boil a large pinch of dry ginger in a cup of water over a low
flame until a quarter of the water boils away , then strain. This tea is drunk
before meals to whet the appetite. A small glass of it can be sipped during or
after meals to aid digestion. Fresh ginger tea is made by first boiling your water and then, with the heat
off, dropping in a few thin slices of unpeeled gingerroot (about one
tablespoon per cup of water). Allow to steep for five minutes, then strain. You can make a much stronger tea by boiling the slices of gingerroot with
the water , but this would be considered a medicinal tea, not to be drunk
every day . As a spice . Ayurveda recommends a variety of ways to use ginger in
cooking. Either the powder or the root can be added to recipes for steamed
vegetables, curri es, gingerbread, cakes, and cookies. You can lightly sprinkle
ginger on your food at the table or chew on a sliver of fresh ginger during
the meal. Although it may be too strong for everyone, scatter ing chopped
gingerroot over your food as a garnish (like parsley) is also considered
worthwhile. Try one approach at a time, however; it does not take much
ginger to kindle agni.Fresh ginger tea aids digestion. Different body types are advised to take ginger in slightly different ways:
Vata types can mix the choppe d fresh root with salt. Pitta types need less
pungency , so weak ginger tea is enough for them, sweetened with sugar to
make the ginger less spicy . Kapha types (and anyone who is overweight)
want it for eliminating excess Kapha from the system, so they can take a
good deal of ginger tea sweetened with honey . If your appetite and/or digestion become poor as the result of nervousness,
stress, or illness, an excellent way to restore it is with the following ginger
routine. Ginger Routine
In a small glass, metal, or ceramic bowl, mash four tablesp oons each
powdered ginger , brown sugar , and ghee (melted, clarified butter , see page
304). Mix to a uniform consistency , cover , and store in a cool place.Take a little bit of this ginger mixture every day before breakfast, making
sure that you follow it with a good breakfast (hot cereal, grape juice,
muffins, and herb tea with cinnamon in it is a good menu). Consume the
ginger mixture according to the following schedule. After finishing the ginger routin e, your digestion should be norm alized. If
you still experience digestive difficulty , see a doctor; at the first sign of
digestive cramps and pain, do not attempt this routine—consult a physician
instead. Ginger Follow-up
If you are trying to cure a long-standing Vata imbalance or want to keep
your digestion at its peak, takin g a little fresh ginger every day is a good
idea. It is also considered the best preventive against build ing up ama
through improper digestion. Cut a thin, nicke l-sized slice from the end of a fresh gingerroot, cut off the
peel, and chop very fine. Add a few drops of lemon juice and a pinch of salt. Eat this mixture a half-hour before lunch and dinner to stimulate your
digestion. If that is incovenient, the mixture can be eaten just before the
meal. GHEEGhee, or clarified butter , is prized because it increases agni without
simultaneously fueling Pitta. Ghee in fact is considered excellent for
balancing Pitta. Kapha types generally need to avoid too much oil of any
kind, but ghee is the best for them, too. Ghee is used:
As a cooking oil. Small amounts of ghee are good for sautéing vegetables
(not for deep-fr ying). Ghee does not work as well as butter in baking—
breads and desserts need the moisture and milk solids in regular butter . As a flavoring in place of butter . Since ghee is a prepared food, using
butter is not the same as using ghee. Where you would ordina rily butter a
vegetable dish or a baked potato or mix it into your oatmeal, ghee is a better
choice. As a digestive. Drizzle a teaspoon of ghee over food at the table (more is
not better , since too much oil of any type is not healthy). How to Make Ghee
Place one pound unsalted butte r in a one-quart saucepan over low heat. Allow to melt completely , then raise heat to medium. Skim off foam as it
rises. When the butter starts to boil, giving off its water conten t, lower heat
again and cook slowly for abou t ten minutes. The ghee is done when all the
moisture has cooked out and the milk solids at the bottom of the pan have
turned light golden brown (there will also be a nutty aroma, but no hint of
burning). Remov e from heat, let cool, and pour into a clean glass jar or bowl. Ghee keeps indefinitely in the refrigerator but can also be stored at cool or
even room temperature for several weeks. OTHER SPICES FOR GOOD AGNI
Herbs and spices can be selected for each body type, as we did in the
Vata-, Pitta-, and Kapha-pacify ing diets. But certain ones are good for
generally improving the quality of agni. (Pitta types have to be careful to use these in small amounts, since they
tend to increase Pitta dosha.) Building up excess Kapha will make digestion difficult by decreasing
agni; it is also bad for buildin g up ama, since both are cold, heavy , and
viscous. Using bitter and pungen t herbs will reduce Kapha and also “scrape”
ama out of the tissues. Ayurve da specifically recommends bitter taste for
purification. Among the more common spices that attack ama are:
As you can see, these are some of the spices recommended for stimulating
agni. The regula r but moderate use of these flavorings in your cooking will
help prevent ama from forming. Chewing fennel seed after a meal and
sweetening your herb tea with raw, uncooked honey are also standard
practices for balancing agni. A BLISSFUL DIET
If bliss is basic to life, there should be a physical counterpart for it in the
body , and indeed there is. According to Ayurveda, the body’ s counterpart to
pure joy is a subtle substance called ojas, which is extrac ted from food once
it has been perfectly digested. Like the doshas, ojas is just on the edge of
being physical; one could call it a subtle substance that registers on both
mind and body . The final and most valuable result of eating a good diet is toextract every drop of this subtle substance from your food. That enables the
cells to “feel happy ,” to experience the cellular equivalent of bliss. Twenty years ago, the idea of a happy cell would have made little sense in
scientific terms. Now we know that the body in fact is capable of generating
a complex network of chemic als (neurotransmitters, neuropeptides, and
related molecules) that the brain uses to communicate emotions throughout
the body . It is also known that a single meal can change the brain’ s
biochemistry quite radically . A brain chemical connected with feelings of
well-being, such as serotonin, goes up and down in response to the food
being digested in the intestinal tract. This has opened up the exciting
possibility of a “food pharmacy ” to correct depression, anxiety , and other
mental disorders, just as fiber helps to correct cholesterol. In Ayurveda we can bypass the bewildering complexity of brain
chemistry . Natur e has given us ojas, a single substance for happiness that the
body makes all the time. THE SA TTVIC DIET
Ideally , any food you eat is turne d into ojas. At the breast, a baby naturally
turns his mother ’s milk into ojas, but it would take a remarkable digestive
tract to produc e ojas from three-day -old leftover pizza. An excellent,
balanced diet can be planned around the foods that turn into ojas with the
least effort on your body’ s part. Ayurveda calls these the sattvic, or pure,
foods. To this list one often sees added wheat, mung beans, coconut , oranges,
dates, and honey . You do not need to be compulsive about these few foods,
or eat them exclusively . Just include them in your diet on a regular basis. On
a more general level, a sattvic diet contains:
Light, soothing, easily digested food
Fresh produce
Spring water
Balance of all six tastes
Moderate portions
According to Ayurveda, this is the best diet for physical strength, a good
mind, good health, and longevi ty. It is conducive to happines s and loving
emotions becau se it is in tune with nature as a whole. The list of sattvic
foods is short and would not fulfill a normal person’ s dietary requirements,
although if well managed, a diet limited to milk, vegetables, rice, and fruit
would certainly be excellent for one’s health. The famous Duke University
rice diet, based only on boiled rice and fruit, is recognized as an effective
therapeutic regime for heart patients, diabetics, and obese people. Milk is currently unfashionable among health-conscious people, who tend
to link it with digestive problem s, allergies, and high cholesterol. Ayurveda
holds that most of the objections to milk have to do with consuming it
improperly . Milk should be boiled before drinking, which makes it more
digestible. It can be drunk hot, warm, or cool, but never ice cold, straight out
of the refrigerat or. Milk should not be taken with tastes that conflict with it
(pungent, sour, salty) but only with other sweet foods (such as grains, sweet
fruits, and cereals). Whenever possible, drink milk from organic dairies that
do not use hormones or pesticides and have a stated commitment to treat
their cows compassionately . Sweet foods aside, it is recomm ended that you drink milk alone rather
than with your meals, since this is easier on your digestive tract. Low-fatmilk may be best for Kapha types, but whole milk is preferred for all other
body types (unless there is a problem with high cholesterol, in which case
skim milk is best). If you still have trouble digesting milk after it is boiled,
or if it seems to create mucous congestion, try adding two pinches of either
turmeric or dry ginger before boiling (adding a little raw sugar or honey will
cut the bitter taste of the turm eric). These measures remove most of the
current objections to milk, which Ayurveda traditionally considers an
excellent food for bodily strengt h, longevity , and peace of mind. Cow’ s milk
is favored above others as the most sattvic. To move in the direction of a more sattvic diet, try having your next plate
of pasta with butter , cream, and Parmesan cheese instead of tomato sauce
with meat, onions, and garlic. Any such change, even for one or two meals,
should amply demonstrate that sattvic eating makes digestion easier , gives
you more energy after you eat, and infuses a light, buoyant feeling
throughout the body . (If you want to measure this difference accurately ,
don’t drink alcohol with your meals while you are experimenting.) If your
cholesterol is elevated, go easy on the butter and cream; tossing the pasta
with olive oil, fresh basil, and a touch of Parmesan is a delicious substitute. Another example of a sattvic food is sweet lassi, an excellent digestive aid
that can be drunk during mild or warm weather (it may tend to promote
excessive Kapha in the chill of winter). Sweet Lassi
For four people , place a scant quarter teaspoon of cardamom, a pinch of
saffron threads, and three tablespoons of hot water in a blender . Blend for
ten seconds. Add two cups plain yogurt, two cups cool water , and two
tablespoons sugar; blend until smooth. If your mixture tastes too sharp, add a
quarter cup heavy cream. Adding a few drops of rose water at the end is
quite sattvic and cools Pitta (rose water is available at Indian and Middle
Eastern groceries and many health-food stores).BITS—BODY INTELLIGENCE TIPS
In Ayurveda, how you eat is just as important as what you eat. The reason
goes back to ojas, which is the end product of all the signals that reach your
body during a meal. Although eating food that tastes good is important, the
other senses— sight, hearing, touch, and smell—also need to send signals
that make your body happy; that is the only way to completely make use of
the mind body connection. An attractive plate of food served steaming hot
from the kitchen sends all the right signals to nourish the doshas, but if you
leave that plate on the table for five hours, it will be unfit to eat, despite the
fact that its raw nutrients have not significantly changed. Your whole body is tremendously alert while you are eating. Your
stomach cells are aware of the conversation at the dinner table , and if they
hear harsh words, the stomach will knot with distress. Then everything you
digest at that meal will be affected, because you have taken in indigestible
sounds. Your stomach cells cann ot literally hear, but the brain, taking in what
the ears hear, sends out chemical messages to update the stomach and every
other organ. So you cannot fool any part of your digestive tract into thinking
that a tense meal is a happy one; your “gut feelings” know better . According to Ayurveda, your duty to your body is to nourish every cell in
it in every way— that is the larger purpose of a sattvic diet. If you are careful
about nourishing your cells completely , they will reward you with ojas, the
perfect expression of their satisfaction. To make that happen, I have provided
sixteen BITS, or Body Intelligence Tips, each of which helps to expand the
satisfaction your body derives from eating. As you follow these BITS, you will be surprised at how much more
enjoyment every meal can give you. Your body can bubble with joy after
every breakfast, lunch, and dinner , once you know the secret of turning food
into ojas. BITS—BODY INTELLIGENCE TIPS
Eat in a settled atmosphere.Never eat when you are upset. Always sit down to eat. Eat only when you feel hungry . Reduce ice-cold food and drink. Don’ t talk while chewing your food. Eat at a moderate pace, neither too fast nor too slow . Wait until one meal is digested before eating the next (i.e., intervals of
two to four hours for light meals, four to six for full meals). Sip warm water with your meal. Eat freshly cooked meals whenever possible. Minimize raw foods—cooked food (preferably well cooked) is much
easier to digest. Do not cook with honey—heated honey is considered to produce ama. Drink milk separately from meals, either alone or with other sweet
foods. Experience all six tastes at every meal. Leave one-third to one-quarter of your stomach empty to aid digestion. Sit quietly for a few minutes after your meal. This concise list gives you a great head start on getting the most out of
any diet. The basic principle here is that food that is easiest to digest is best
for you, which explains why well-cooked food is preferred over raw, hot
over cold, fresh over processed . Making digestion easier is also the reason
for sipping warm water with your meal, eliminating milk, and sitting brieflyat the table once you are finishe d eating in order for your body to settle into
its digestive rhythms. Another important principle is moderation. Moderate amounts of food are
taken at regular mealtimes—the Ayurvedic texts consider a double handful
of food to be an ideal portion. Take this amount as a first serving and go
back for more if you still feel hungry . It is advisable to leave one-third to
one-quarter of your stomach empty at the end of your meal. Your digestive
tract will work more efficiently on smaller portions, and your body will find
it much easier to control its weight automatically . Don’ t be afraid that you
will walk away from the table hungry . Being satisfied is not the same as
being stuffed. If you leave a little empty room in your stomach, you will feel
light, buoyant, energetic, and much fresher an hour after you eat. That is how
a properly eaten meal feels, leading naturally to a properly digested one. BITS for Weight Loss
If you have a problem with overweight, try using these BITS before going
on any kind of calorie-cutting diet. You will be surprised to find that your
excess weight is caused not just by what you’ve been eating but by how
you’ve been eating it— carelessly or compulsively , on the run instead of
sitting down, between meals instead of at regular hours. These are simple
things, of course, but they make a big dif ference. Leaving aside the very small minority who actually have a hormone or
metabolic problem, most overweight people are the victims of conditioning
—bad habits that have been unconsciously built into their bodies over time. Everyone’ s body has the intellig ence to know the right amount to eat; nature
gave us the hunger reflex to tell us when our bodies want food and its
opposite, the satiation reflex, to tell us when our stomachs are satisfied. People who have lost these instincts have surrendered an important aspect of
their body’s intelligence. They eat like machines, switched on by automatic
cues—the sight and smell of food, or just the thought of it. But by following
these BITS they can return to “conscious eating,” guided by their body’ s
inner intelligence.WHEN OJAS IS LESS
Besides overeating, other abuses at the table can suppress our healthy
instincts for eating. If you consume a meal while feeling angry , an Ayurvedic
doctor would say that you are producing mental ama from your food, while a
Western physici an would say that a stress reaction is throwing off your
endocrine balanc e. The end result is the same, a damaging chemical message
going straight to your cells. Even before you eat the first bite of food, disturbances in the doshas can
negate your body’s attempt to produce ojas. As usual, Vata dosh a comes into
play here—wha tever throws off Vata dosha also damages ojas—worry , loud
noise, going without sleep, and drastic diets and fasting. On the positive side,
anything that calms Vata during mealtimes is good for ojas. Most people do not eat a strict ly sattvic diet in this country , so I would
like to give a few more reasons why changing to one would benefit your
health. You will notice that a sattvic diet is vegetarian, and it is now common
knowledge that vegetarians have excellent blood pressure (18 percent lower
than average) and lower rates of heart disease and cancer . In addition, the
federal governm ent has warned us for twenty-five years that Americans eat
far too much salt, protein, and animal fat, most of which come s from meat
(much of the excess salt also comes from processed foods). If you started
reducing your meat intake today , moving gradually in the direction of a
meatless diet, you would almost certainly lessen your chance of having a
heart attack in the future. By including sweet foods on the list, Ayurveda
does not mean to condone the huge amounts of refined white sugar that most
of us now consume. The sweetness of pasta, rice, and bread is enough. Like everything else, there are two extremes in diet. Certain foods are not
easily turned into ojas; among them are the following:
Non-Ojas Diet
Meat, poultry , and fishHeavy and oily foods
Cheese
Leftovers and processed food
Excess of sour , salty tastes
Overeating
For the sake of economy and convenience, many cooks like to save
leftovers, but Ayurveda frowns on this practice. Food is meant to be eaten
fresh, right off the stove if not right out of the garden—the fresher the
produce, the more the ojas. Old, cold food, even when reheated, will not
produce ojas in the same amou nts. Frozen food in general is also good to
avoid. Drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes destroys ojas and prevents
other foods from producing it. Air and water pollution are equally
detrimental. All of these influences are called tamasic, which means that
they produce dullness and inertia by promoting the buildup of ama. Kapha
types should be especially wary , since their naturally slow digestion makes it
easier for ama to form. Finally , here are a few time-ho nored rules about a blissful diet handed
down in the Ayurvedic tradition, each aimed at maximizing ojas. Eat fresh food suitable to the season and your geographical area. The
best possible foods for the body are fruits, vegetables, and dairy
products raised in your area— foods have thrived on the same air ,
water , nutrients, and sunlight that you grow on. Have your lar gest meal at lunch, when digestion is strongest. Dinner
should be a modest meal that can be digested before bedtime; breakfast
is optional and in any case should be your smallest meal of the day . Eat at the same time every day . Besides not snacking, avoid eating at
night, which disturbs your digestive rhythms and easily promotes ama
as you sleep from the food that is undigested.Dine either alone or with people you genuinely like. Negative emotions,
whether yours, the cook’ s, or those of the people around you, have a
harmful ef fect on digestion. Be grateful for nature’ s unending gift of food, and respect it as you do
yourself. OceanofPDF .comCHAPTER 13
EXERCISE—THE MYTH OF “NO P AIN, NO GAIN”
From an Ayurvedic standpoint, much of the exercise recommended today
falls short of ideal. Why do we need physical activity in the first place? Charaka, the greatest writer on Ayurveda, gave this answer: “From physical
exercise one gets lightness, a capacity for work, firmness, tolerance of
difficulties, elimination of impurities, and stimulation of digestion.”
Aerobics for your heart or weight training for your muscles achieve some of
these goals, but these are not comprehensive enough activities to fit
Charaka’ s description. The ideal is to balance the whole system , mind and
body . It is also vital that exercise give more energy than it takes, a
consideration that people tend to ignore. One very simple exercise, walking, comes close to being ideal because it
is a natural activity that satisfies all three doshas. Vata types find that taking
a long walk tranquilizes them. Pitta types react quite differently . They like
being slowed down from the driving pace that so often overtakes them
during their workday . Kaphas feel stimulated and lighter; a brisk walk
clears out any minor congestion they might have built up and makes their
typically slow digestion more efficient. For these reasons, a brisk half-hour
walk every day is one of the prime recommendations we make to patients at
the Chopra Center . Patients are also taught a new approach to exercise in which the aim is
not to strain or to pound their muscles into shape. They are shown that
exercise is meant to forge a closer link between themselves and their
quantum mecha nical bodies—it thus becomes a powerful tool for balance. We call this approach “three-d osha exercise.” It is embodied in a set of
short, connected routines:The Sun Salute ( Surya Namaskara )—a morning exercise that
combines stretching, balance, and calisthenics (1 to 6 minutes)
Neuromuscular integration—a set of gentle yoga positions (10 to 15
minutes)
Balanced breathing—a simple form of Pranayama , a traditional yogic
breath exercise (5 minutes)
The description of these exercises begins on page 325. Performing them
in connection with meditation, for which they are ideally suited, raises mind
body integration to a new level. To begin with, these exercises are natural
and comfortable forms of activity that the doshas welcome. They can also
be performed by all age groups and do not require you to be in shape. From the very first session, people discover the intimacy that nature has
established between awareness and physiology . The body is not just a shell
or a walking life-support system. It is your self intimately clothed in matter . Getting back in touch with this intimacy is very reassuring and delightful,
particularly for people who have given up on exercise and become virtual
strangers to their bodies. SUCCESS WITHOUT PAIN
Before explaini ng these points further , let’s consider conventional
exercise. Since life is generally meant to be comfortable and happy ,
Ayurveda views exercise as a means to that end. It holds that exercise
should always leave you ready for work. Exercise shouldn’ t be work itself. Yet, many Americans see it that way. They feel that without a grim and
determined attitude, they are not doing much good for themse lves. (Go to
the park early tomorrow mornin g and count how many frowns there are on
the faces of the runners you see.) If you get only one benefit from
Ayurveda’ s approach to exercise, it should be that “no pain, no gain” is a
myth.A good way to see this is in terms of Vata dosha. All physica l activity
increases Vata. A moderate increase makes you feel more vigorous, alert,
and clearheaded, as well as stronger physically . You are getting mental and
physical benefits together , in a natural balance. But overstimulating Vata
destroys all these benefits. It makes you feel restless, fatigued, and shaky . How much is enough, then? As a general rule, Ayurveda wants us to
exercise to 50 percent of maximum capacity . If you can bicycle ten miles,
go for five; if you can swim twenty laps, make it ten. These lower limits are
not detrimental to fitness; in fact they make exercise more efficient, because
you are not givin g your body so much repair work to do afterwa rd, and your
cardiovascular system will have an easier time returning to normal after
your workout. Another simple guideline has to do with exertion. Rather
than exerting yourself to the point where you are sweating heavily and
panting for breath, just go until you break out into a light sweat and start to
mouth breathe. Those are natural signals that you are at the right limit. You are going too far if you begin to pant or sweat profusely , if you feel
your heart pounding violently , or if your knees feel rubbery . At the first sign
of overe xertion, stop exercising , give yourself a few minutes of walking
around to let the system cool down by stages, and then rest for another few
minutes until your pulse and breathing are back to normal. In the heat of
competitive sports such as tenni s and racquetball, you may not notice how
strenuously you are exerting yourself. If it is fun to play, then keep on. But
if you are pushi ng yourself to win the game or to prove that you can keep
up with someone else, your attitude is needlessly punishing your body . Vata types especially should be careful not to overdo; their constitutions
generally have lower exercise thresholds than Pittas, and Pittas lower than
Kaphas. Exertio n also needs to be adjusted for age: over the age of 45 or 50,
everyone begins to have increased Vata, which should be comp ensated for
by not exercising as hard as before. As in everything else, you need to
respect your doshas. | Perfect_Health_-_The_Complete_Mind_Body_Guide_by_Deepak_Chopra.txt | Summarize the following text section accurately and concisely. Maintain specific details and numerical information, and use anti-repetition mechanisms:
Warm milk before going to
bed is a good idea, but eating very late at night is not—it may help you
fall asleep, but your body will feel worse in the morning. Lassi, a traditional Indian drink, is good for ridding the body of excess
Vata. To make it, whisk together one-half cup plain yogurt and one-half
cup water; flavor with a pinch of powdered ginger, salt, or cumin. Sweet mango lassi, made from equal parts yogurt and mango pulp
(fresh or canned) is particularly delicious and also balances Vata. For a
lighter beverage, either lassi can be diluted with between one-half and
one cup of water. One ef ficient and instant way to settle Vata is to
sprinkle a special spice powder, called a Vata churna, over your plate at
the table. An Internet source for churnas is on page 378. Vata-Pacifying FoodsDairyAll dairy is acceptable, unless you have a known lactase deficiency. Pitta-Pacifying Diet
Favor:
Cool or warm but not steaming-hot foods
Moderately heavy textur es
Bitter, sweet, and astringent tastes
Less butter and added fat
Pitta types are born with naturally strong, efficient digestion that remains
that way unless disturbed. They come closest to the ideal of being able to eat
a little of everything. Therefor e, they need to be careful to avoid dietary
abuses. The continued use of too much salt, overindulgence in sour and
spicy food, and overeating are the most common aggravating influences. Being the only hot dosha, Pitta appreciates cool foods, particularly in
summer. It is a good idea to be especially scrupulous about having bitter and
astringent tastes in your meals (supplied mainly through salads and
legumes). These two rasas curb the appetite, dry up excessive moisture, and
keep the palate sharp. They also counteract the dulling effect of too much
salt and sugar on the taste buds, making it easier for Pittas to be moderate in
their appetites, as nature intended them to be. Anything that makes dining a
more soothing and orderly experience will also help to pacify this dosha. The Pitta-pacify ing diet given below is the natural choice for Pitta types,
unless a Ayurvedically trained physician has indicated otherwi se. Our Pitta
patients report that they feel more balanced on this diet, still energetic but
with a “softer” energy. Their roaring appetites calm down, too. If you suffer
from mild symptoms of Pitta imbalance, such as heartburn, irritability, or
excessive thirst, this diet is also good. Try it for a month and see if your
symptoms are alleviated. Some general points to help you implement this diet are as follows. Cool, refreshing food is best for Pitta types in summer, with a decrease
in salt, oil, and spices, all of which are heating to the body. Salads
contain two tastes, bitter and astringent, that balance Pitta and are also
cold and light. Milk and ice cream are good, too. Excessive Pitta makes the body too sour; to counteract this, you should
generally avoid pickles, yogurt, sour cream, and cheese. Fresh lemon
juice is an exception and can be used, sparingly, instead of vinegar in
your salad dressings. Fermented foods and alcoholic beverages are
aggravating to Pitta because of their sourness, as are the acids in cof fee. Learning to drink herb tea, either mint, licorice root, or the specialPitta-pacifying tea you can order (see page 378), will often make a big
difference in smoothing your moods. A breakfast of cold cereal, cinnamon toast, and apple juice is a good
replacement for cof fee, doughnut, and orange juice, all of which disturb
Pitta. The fat in red meat, which also heats the body, is not needed by Pitta
people. Although they like to eat meat, particularly if they are high-
powered movers and shakers, Pittas do better on a vegetarian diet than
any other body type. If you are not vegetarian, make sure that your diet
includes abundant amounts of milk, grains, and vegetables. All of these
make Pittas feel extremely good. Once they become accustomed to
health-food restaurants, Pittas like them better than their old steak
houses because they feel calmer and more satisfied afterward. Fried foods are oily, hot, salty, and heavy, all qualities that Pittas need
to avoid. On the other hand, starchy foods—vegetables, grains, and
beans—are satisfying and cut ravenous Pitta hunger. The steady ener gy
of a high-carbohydrate diet will counteract the tendency to overeat
under stress. Processed and fast foods lean heavily on salt and sour tastes; it is a
good idea for Pitta types to avoid them as much as possible. Since Pittas
are fond of luxury, a subdued, elegant restaurant brings out the best in
them. Japanese and Chinese food, being relatively low in fat and meat,
are good choices for Pittas. When you eat out, order cool, not iced,
water, take salad instead of hot soup, have the bread with a small
amount of butter, and feel free to order dessert. Spicy food is too
intoxicating to Pitta; if you like Mexican food, minimize the cheese and
sour cream, and have a cool guacamole salad to counteract the heavy
aggravation of Pitta caused by chilies. Pittas respond well to low-salt diets, but if forced to eat tasteless food,
they will quickly rebel. Keeping salt of f the table and adding it only in
the kitchen while you cook is a good compromise. Cocktail hour with
salty snacks is worse for Pitta types than anyone else. The dry, saltyfood and the alcohol combine to inflame their appetites and stomach
linings. To bring down aggravated Pitta, a standard recommendation is to take
two teaspoons of ghee (clarified butter) in a glass of warm milk. This
also acts as a laxative, which helps flush excess Pitta from the system. Have your ghee and milk in place of dinner or two hours after a light
dinner. You can also have it in place of breakfast. (Do not take ghee,
however, if you have a problem with elevated cholesterol. ) One ef ficient and instant way to settle Pitta is to sprinkle a special spice
powder, called a Pitta churna, over your plate at the table. An Internet
source for churnas is on page 378. Pitta-Pacifying Foods
SweetenersAll sweeteners are acceptable, except honey and molasses. Plus small amounts of cumin and black pepperKapha is a slow dosha to be affected by food, but over time, Kapha types
become imbalan ced as a result of eating too many sweet, rich foods. Other
problems can develop, but in Western society, where sugar and fat account
for more than half of the calories consumed by the average person, Kaphas
have to be on guard against this influence. Salt also needs to be watched,
since it too is greatly overused and promotes fluid retention in many Kaphas. Anything that increases lightness should be favored—a small, light meal
at breakfast and dinner, lightly cooked foods (no deep-frying), raw fruits and
vegetables. Eating spicy food will promote better digestion and warm your
body; bitter and astringent foods will help to curb your appetite. In general,
anything that makes eating stimulating will help balance Kapha and avert the
danger, ever -present with most Kapha types, of overindulging at the table. The Kapha-pacifying diet given below is the natural choice for Kapha
body types, unless contrary advice has been given by a Ayurvedically trained
physician. Switc hing to this diet helps many of our Kapha patients feel more
balanced, energetic, lighter, and happier about themselves. If you suffer from
mild symptoms of Kapha imbalance, such as a stuffed or runny nose, being
slow to start in the morning, or oversleeping, this diet is also good. Try it for
six weeks and see if your symptoms are alleviated. The following suggestions will help people implement a Kapha-pacifying
diet. Given a choice, pick hot food over cold at every meal—a hot luncheon
entree instead of a sandwich, hot apple pie instead of ice cream, grilledfish instead of tuna salad. Warming up cold Kapha digestion is always
good for balance. Dry cooking methods (baking, broiling, grilling,
sautéing) are better for Kaphas than moist ones (steaming, boiling,
poaching). Before you eat, stimulate your appetite with bitter or pungent tastes
instead of salty or sour. The bitterness of romaine lettuce, endive, or
tonic water will wake up your taste buds without encouraging you to
overeat. Ginger tea or even a pinch of fresh gingerroot is also highly
recommended. In general, you want to be sure that bitter and astringent
tastes are present in every meal. To get them, it is not necessary to seek
out bitter food in quantity. A little bitterness in a salad or the
astringency of herbs supplies enough. Among the household spices,
cumin, fenugreek, sesame seed, and turmeric are both bitter and
astringent. Adding pungent tastes to your diet with spices is one of the best ways to
balance Kapha. Anything spicy is good, including very hot Mexican or
Indian food that makes your eyes water. This action flushes out all the
mucous membranes. Contrary to what we tend to think, hot, spicy food
is best not in the summer but in the winter; it of fsets the cold, damp
quality that Kapha resents. Kaphas need to eat breakfast mainly to get them started in the morning,
not for solid nourishment. Rather than relying on a jolt of caf feine from
coffee, wake your body up with light, Kapha-reducing foods, such as
hot spiced cider, buckwheat pancakes with apple butter, corn muf fins,
and bitter cocoa made with skim milk and a touch of honey. In general,
anything hot and light is good, while anything cold, heavy, or sweet is
not so good. Cold cereals, cold juice or milk, and sugary pastries tend to
create congestion, particularly in damp winter weather. Bacon and
sausage are Kapha-aggravating because of their salt and oil. If you
don’t feel hungry in the morning, it is all right to skip breakfast, which
Ayurveda considers optional, especially for Kapha types. If you wake up feeling congested in the morning, a sign of excess
Kapha, the best things to take are honey, hot water, lemon juice, andginger. Hot ginger tea (page 301) is excellent for Kapha types in
general, since it stimulates the system and flushes out excess Kapha. If
you occasionally skip a meal—a good idea for many Kaphas—a
spoonful of honey in hot water will tide you over. Cutting back on sweets is dif ficult for many Kaphas, but a trial week on
a low-sugar diet generally does result in feeling lighter and more
energetic. Honey is extensively recommended for Kapha types, but you
should not take more than a tablespoon or so per day; honey is not
suitable to cook with, either, since heating honey makes it
unwholesome, according to Ayurveda. Out-of-balance Kapha types overindulge in dairy products, but butter,
ice cream, and cheese are among the worst for you, since they make
your system colder and more congested. Low-fat milk is best,
preferably pre-boiled to aid digestion, with only a minimum of other
dairy products. Sesame seeds on rolls and bread help to counteract the
sweet, heavy quality of the wheat, which is not the best for Kapha,
either. Because they combine too much heavy sweetness, a hambur ger
and milkshake, or even a sandwich with milk, should be eaten only
infrequently. Raw fruits, vegetables, and salads are extremely good, since their fiber
tones the intestinal tract, in addition to the benefits of their astringent
tastes. Generally speaking, Ayurveda prefers all food cooked, but we
find that this is an exception that helps most Kapha types. Deep-fried foods of any kind will aggravate Kapha; they are among the
few things you should try to eliminate from your diet. There is no need
to banish all fats, but make an ef fort to use less butter and oil in your
cooking. Corn oil is heating to the body; it is a good choice for you in
small quantities, along with almond and sunflower oils. Crisp-steamed
vegetables with a little ghee (clarified butter) drizzled over them is
good for a light supper; anything crisp, fresh, and stimulating balances
Kapha. Restaurant food has to be carefully chosen by Kapha people. Fast food
is far too oily, salty, and sweet—head for the salad bar and use a
minimum of salad dressing. If you are eating out in better restaurants,
Oriental cooking is the lightest, particularly if you concentrate on more
vegetables than meat. Wherever you go, order a glass of hot water
instead of iced, take salad instead of hot soup (except in cold weather),
avoid the rolls and butter, and make dessert small and not too rich—hot
fruit pies are probably the best choice. One ef ficient and instant way to settle Kapha is to sprinkle a special
spice powder, called a Kapha churna, over your plate at the table. An
Internet source for churnas is on page 378. Kapha-Pacifying Foods
THE SIX TASTES
Each of the six tastes speaks directly to the quantum mechanical body, and
each carries a different message. Our tongues know this instinctively. The
voluptuous sweetness of vanilla custard is diametrically opposed to the bitterbite of lemon peel; one is soothing, the other is a shock. Your whole body
reacts to the difference, which begins on your tongue but continues
throughout your body. Taste leaves a trail of reactions from your mouth to
the food’ s final destination, your cells. Without knowing about nutritional balance in terms of fats, carbohydrates,
and proteins, native cultures around the world have realized that their diets
had to be dynamic. They had to have tastes that wake up the body, like bitter
and astringent, and others that soothe it, primarily sweet. Digestion
sometimes need ed to be increa sed with “hot” tastes—pungen t, sour, and
salty—and at other times decreased with “cold” tastes—bitter, astringent,
and sweet. All of this was understood instinctively. In Mexico, the limited fare of
corn and beans could not by itself have supported a healt hy, balanced
existence, but with the addition of red chilies, it has served the native people
for many centu ries. Red chili adds vitamin C to a diet, but the more
important additi on it brings are the sweet and pungent tastes that round out
the six rasas. Curry spices serve the same purpose in India, where the staples
of rice, lentils, and wheat bread would be dramatically limited without them. MESSAGES FROM NA TURE
Every food has its own profile of tastes. Simple foods, such as white sugar
or vineg ar, have only one taste, but most others have at least two: lemon is
sour, but also sweet and bitter; carrots are sweet, bitter, and astringent;
cheese is sweet and sour. Milk is considered a complete food, having the
subtle presence of all six rasas besides its obvious sweetness; for this reason,
Ayurveda recommends drinking milk alone rather than combin ing it with a
meal. (Having milk with other sweet foods—fruit, grains, and sugar—is
good, however; in fact, milk is the best buffer for refined white sugar, which
enters the system in a rush if digested alone. ) The major food groups all revolve around the rasa of sweet, but with the
five other tastes carefully blended in:Fruits—primarily sweet and astringent, with citrus fruits adding sour
Vegetables—primarily sweet and astringent, with leafy gr eens adding bitter
Dairy—primarily sweet, with yogurt and cheese adding sour and astringent
Meat—primarily sweet and astringent
Oils—primarily sweet
Grains and Nuts—primarily sweet
Legumes—primarily sweet and astringent
Herbs and Spices—primarily pungent, with all other flavors added
secondarily
Just as most foods are sweet, so is Kapha dosha, the builder of tissues; the
human body as a whole is therefore sweet, too. Herbs and spices fill in the
spectrum of tastes, but, more important, they evoke a complete range of
bodily responses. Black pepper makes your mouth water, fenugreek dries it
up; mustard heats the body, mint cools it off. The only blank space is salt,
which is provided by salt itself. Using its taste profile, every food can be described as either increasing or
decreasing one or more dosha s, as we saw. Since the three doshas are
connected, an increase of one is so crucial that Ayurveda has described every
food according to whether it will increase or decrease a particular dosha. Cabbage, for instance, is known to increase Vata, onions to increase Pitta, all
oils to increase Kapha. Considering that half a dozen messages are being relayed to the body
simultaneously by any one food, you can get just as strong a headache
computing the six rasas as trying to compute every gram of fat,
carbohydrate, and protein. This complex job belongs to a Ayurvedic doctor. To him, food is medicine, and its properties must be scrutinized as closely as
any other medic ine. He needs to know that cabbage is sweet and astringent,
dry and cooling, and therefore a strong aggravator of Vata (that is whycabbage tends to form gas in the colon, the seat of Vata). He would then be
able to prescribe an offsetting food (such as fennel) to counteract Vata
aggravation. He also knows that every food delivers an “aftertaste” (vipak ) that affects
the body once the food has been digested. Cabbage’ s aftertaste is pungent,
for example. Vipak is an important consideration when a doctor is
prescribing a therapeutic diet, because he needs to know every aspect of the
food that is affecting his patient’ s doshas. At home you do not have to be so
specific. The aftertaste of food once it has been digested is something we
will leave to the doctor, but for the sake of completion, vipak is classified as
follows:
Sweet and salty tastes lead to sweet vipak
Sour taste leads to sour vipak
Pungent, bitter, and astringent tastes lead to pungent vipak
Thus the six tastes are reduced to three after digestion is completed. In the following pages we delve more deeply into the six rasas and what
they say to your doshas. I hope you will read this section at least once, but
do not memorize it. Your taste buds, not your mind, should be the final judge
of taste. Sweet is a taste that strongly increases Kapha. Eating sweet foods will
bring on Kapha qualities in the body—coldness, heaviness (by adding fat),
steadiness, and physical energy. Just as Kapha people are naturally the mosteasily satisfied, sweet is the most satisfying taste. It is very Kapha to be
sweet-natured and motherly—from childhood on, two Kapha foods, milk
and sugar, represent motherlines s. Any food that feels nourishin g and brings
satisfaction generally has a sweet component. For instance, all meats, oils,
and most grains are considered sweet. Ayurveda looks upon rice and wheat,
the two grains that are the staff of life in the East and West, as sweet in taste. Ghee (clarified butter) is another sweet food, being derived from milk; it is
considered the best remedy for balancing Pitta. Sweet foods are also soothing and relieve thirst. If you are in a nervous,
unsettled mood, which is a sign of aroused Vata, sweet will calm you; it also
puts out the fire of Pitta (an angry baby is pacified by givin g it milk or
sugar). However, too much sugar is not stabilizing; it makes the mind dull
and drow sy. Complacency, greed, and emotional dependency come from too
much sweet. Too much sweet becomes cloying. It leads to negative qualities that come
from pushing Kapha too far: sluggishness, overweight, mental dullness,
excess mucus, congestion, and sleepiness. Kapha people are endowed with
qualities of satisfaction and well-being that Vata and Pitta types have to seek
through sweet tastes. However, in the case of any Kapha imba lance, sweet
foods are considered undesirab le and should be reduced or avoided. Only
honey is an exception to this rule. It is better than any other sweet food for
balancing Kapha. Salt increases both Pitta and Kapha. It sparks digestion, a Pitta function. Its taste adds savor to food, stokes the appetite, and starts the flow of saliva
and stom ach juices. Salt is hot like Pitta (all the digestive processes heat up
the body). Too much of it, however, and the other tastes are overwhelmed,
making nothing taste good. The Kapha connection is through two otherqualities Ayurveda associates with salt—oiliness and heaviness. By attaching
itself to water molecules, salt makes your tissues heavier. Excessive salt will
make it harder to control food cravings, which Kapha types must do to
remain on a balanced diet. By making you eat too much, salt adds fat and
leads to overweight. In the West, the connection between salt and hypertension has been
convincing enough that many patients with high blood pressure have been
forbidden to eat any but the smallest amounts of salt. This implied that salt
was somehow an enemy. Now it is known that such restrictions were too
severe—a norm al person can eat moderate amounts of salt without harm to
his blood pressu re. The basic reason not to overindulge is that a moderate
diet promotes health in every way, not just by averting hypertension. Ayurveda would point out that salt doesn’ t raise blood pressure, the doshas
do. It takes a dosha imbalance before the salt will do any harm. Too much salt also leads to Pitta-related skin inflammation, acne, and
overheating. If there is a Pitta or Kapha imbalance in the body, salty food is
considered undesirable. Emotionally, salt gives life its zest, but too much salt nullifies this effect,
just as too many potato chips kills the appetite instead of stimulates it. If you
overuse salt, it takes more and more of it to register at all—this is why salty
foods are compulsive. Excess salt in general is associated with cravings and
compulsive desires. Like salt, sour is a Pitta-Kapha taste that sparks the digestion and adds
savor to food. It is refreshing to eat sour food, but it increases thirst, which is
connected to Pitta—the heat generated by extra Pitta has to be slaked with
lots of water. Sour food can therefore add to fluid retention, making the body
heavier (more Kapha). Pitta’ s sharp qualities, such as sharp intellect and
wittiness, are increased by sour foods, but “turning sour” is also possible,
since too much Pitta is connected with resentment and envy, popularly called
“sour grapes. ”
Cheese and yogurt derive their sourness from fermentation. In small
quantities, sour foods make the digestive juices flow. However, Ayurveda is
distinctly opposed to fermented sourness in general—vinegar and fermented
alcohol are considered toxic, reflecting the Pitta-Kapha quality of this taste. Out-of-balance Pitta brings toxicity to the blood; out-of-balance Kapha
makes the tissues stagnant with ama. Excess of sour foods leads to acidic difficulties in the body, such as ulcers,
disturbed blood chemistry, skin irritations, and heartburn. If there is a Pitta
or Kaph a imbalance in the body already, sour foods are considered
undesirable. Fermented foods are undesirable at any time except in small
amounts. Bitter is the most Vata of tastes, being light, cold, and dry in its effects on
the body. It is a corrective taste, bringing the cravings for sweet, sour, andspicy foods back into balance. Bitter quickens the palate by waking it up, not
by satisfying it, a very Vata property, since Vata is responsible for alertness. A dash of bitters or a glass of tonic water is effective in getting the digestion
going for people with slow digestion; the bitterness instantly makes the
palate want the more satisfying tastes. Bitter tones the tissues, a proper ty that gave tonic water its name. Bitter is
the best taste, along with sweet, for cooling you off in hot weather. When the
body has beco me toxic, inflamed, hot, or itchy as a result of Pitta
aggravation, bitter is considered the best corrective. (Bitter quinine bark
soothes fever, for example. ) In excess, bitter aggravates Vata, leading to typical Vata complaints—loss
of appet ite, weight loss, headaches, unsteadiness, dry skin, and a hollow
feeling of weakness. The braci ng alertness associated with bitter turns to
bitter feelings in excess, associated with lack of satisfaction—anything that
is too Vata is not satisfying, because Vata’s nature is constantly to seek
change. Grief, which destroys the balance of Vata and makes life seem
completely without satisfaction, is bitter. In Ayurveda, hot, spicy food is considered to have its own taste, called
pungent. Pungen cy is immediately recognizable because it causes a burning
sensation (the increased Pitta) and thirst (the drying effect of increased Vata). Pungency heats up the body and makes fluids flow out of it. As a result,
digestion is increased and congested tissues are cleaned out. Sweat, tears,
saliva, mucus, and the blood all start flowing when pungency is present. Because it flushes out your sinus cavities, pungent food is the best for
balancing Kapha, which when aggravated leads to congestion of mucous
membranes. Western medicine long thought that spicy food must be bad for
anyone with irritated mucous membranes, but the effect of opening and
flushing out the tissues is now considered extremely beneficial; sufferers of
chronic bronchitis and asthma have sometimes been put on Mexican food
laden with chili pepper. The antitoxic effect of pungent is said to help clear
the skin, even though Pitta is increased—the Vata dryness clean s out the oily
pores that exacerbate acne. In excess, pungency turns to pain—eating a raw chili causes swollen lips
and eyes, burni ng skin, and hot sweat. Too much spicy food makes you
overly thirsty, dizzy, and unsett led, reflecting the Vata influence (too much
Vata makes for light-headednes s and dryness). The sharpness of pungent, if
pushed too far, will not excite the body but irritate it. The same is true of the emotio ns. Pungent humor is invigorating, but it
can also be sharp and hurtful. Excitable, extroverted people are already
inclined to be pungent—if you add more, they turn feverish. If a Vata or Pitta
imbalance is present in the body, pungent food is not desirable. Astringent, the taste that makes your mouth dry and puckered, is the least
familiar of the six rasas. It is an alkaline taste, equal but opposite to the
puckering of sour lemons. Like bitter, astringent is Vata—the gas produced
by boile d cabbage and the dry, mealy taste of beans are both Vata effects. Astringency is light like bitter but more appetizing; traditional cultures
around the world have subsisted on beans, and in the Middle Ages, cabbagewas a staple food throughout Europe. Astringency is settling; potatoes,
carrots, and other earthy foods bring out this satisfying ef fect. Astringent is cooling and constr ictive; it stops the flow of secretions such
as sweat and tears (making beans a good pairing for chili peppe rs, since they
offset each other). In excess, its constricting effect may lead to Vata
complaints of constipation and dry mouth, along with gas or distension in
the lower abdomen. People who have a dry wit are astringent. It is a quality that dampens
excitement and brings you back to yourself. Taken too far, however,
astringency becomes shriveling. The sudden constriction when you are
seized by fear and the dry mouth that anxiety brings are both negative
astringent qualities. Astringent emotions lack warmth in general; to be old,
cold, and shriveled up is what makes people into old prunes if they age
badly. If there is a Vata imbalance in the body, astringent food is undesirable. AGNI—THE DIGESTIVE FIRE
Most people have never consulted a physician about their digestion. As a
society used to good health, we take for granted our ability to process food,
and, in the absence of a seriou s problem like peptic ulcers or colitis, we
ignore the occasional upset stomach or uncomfortable night spent after
“eating the whole thing. ”
Ayurveda, on the other hand, considers poor digestion a major factor in
the disea se process and extols good digestion as the giver of health. Every
cell has been created from food. If the food has been used well, then the cells
will be built well; if it has been used badly, then the disease process has
already started. The Ayurvedic sages liked to say that if you could digest it
properly, poison would be good for you, while with poor digestion, a person
can die from drinking nectar. DIGESTION AND THE DOSHASAyurveda says that there are no absolutely good or bad foods, only food
that is good or bad for you. Being able to extract every life-giving value
from what you eat is of the utmost importance. People are not born equal in
this regard— the three major body types have very different powers of
digestion. Vata digestion tends to be variable and often delicate. Pitta digestion tends to be str ong and intense. Kapha digestion tends to be slow and often heavy. As with everyth ing that the doshas touch, each style of digest ion has its
advantages and drawbacks. Vatas may not be thrilled to discover that they
tend to have delicate or unreliable digestion, but this makes them more
discriminating eaters, and they rarely have to worry about the runaway
appetites of Pittas or the discouraging slide into overweight experienced by
many Kaphas. The important thing is to make maximum use of the digestion
you were born with and improve it as much as possible. The digestive tract not only extracts nutrition for your body, it is highly
responsive to your emotions. Your “gut feelings” have been put there by
nature so that the mind and body can communicate. Vata imbalance often
shows up as disturbed feelings that create pain in the intestines. Pitta dosha
is responsible for correct metabolism and “pure blood” (absence of toxins) ;
it is also the dosha that controls the proper rate of digestion. This is called
agni, or “the digestive fire. ”
Agni is one of the most impor tant principles in Ayurveda, equal to the
doshas. A primary sign of good health is that your agni is burnin g bright, that
is, you are digesting your food efficiently, distributing all the necessary
nutrients to every cell, and burning off waste products without leaving
deposits of toxins. Therefore, by balancing agni, one keeps all these things in
balance at the same time. Nature has set up everyone’ s body in such a way that agni follo ws a cycle
throughout the day; unless agni’ s daily rhythm is correctly set, digestion willsuffer. One of the most valuable things to know is how to reset a flickering
agni and coax it back into its natural groove. HOW TO RESET AGNI
Agni’ s daily rhythm rises and falls, making you slightly hungry in the
morning, very hungry at noon, and moderately hungry in the early evening. In between these times, agni shuts down your appetite so that it can proceed
to diges t the food you have already eaten. When your stomach is empty
again, agni renews your appetite once more. If this basic cycle is thrown off, the body becomes confused—ap petite and
digestion start to overlap. Your agni will tell you if this has happened by a
wide range of symptoms:
Heartburn and acid stomach
Fluttering stomach or nervous digestion
Loss of appetite at mealtimes
Constipation or diarrhea
Lack of interest in food
Overweight or underweight
Serious digestive disorders: irritable bowel syndrome, ulcers,
diverticulitis, et cetera
The first and most important thing to do if any of these symptoms appears
is to reset your agni to its natura l cycle. It is also a good idea to do this just
to tone your digestion, even if you have no digestive problems. Vata types can reset agni once a month. Pitta types can reset agni twice a month (it is also good to do it when ever
your appetite has become ravenous and you begin to overeat). Kapha types can reset agni up to once a week, unless there are serious
digestive compl aints. Kapha dosha benefits from this routine more than the
other doshas, since digestion tends to be heavy and slow. No matter what your body type, do not attempt to reset your agni if you
are feeling sick. Being sick usually indicates that agni is down (or at least
not running correctly); that is not a good time to be tampering with it. If you
have an ulcer, colitis, or any other serious digestive complaint, do not restart
agni, except under a doctor ’s care. The method for resetting agni is as follows:
Weekend Pr ogram
It takes roughly two days to reset agni. Since rest is one of the
requirements on the day you do not eat, doing the program over the weekend
is best for most people. FRIDA Y ROUTINE
Eat normally at breakfast and lunch. Do not have an afternoon snack or
any alcohol after noon. Eat a light dinner of nourishing food, making sure
that it is satisfyi ng but not heavy; exclude spicy food and cheese. Just before
bedtime, take a laxative—three tablets of senna (Sennokot®), followed by a
small glass of hot water. Go to bed early. Some people will wake up during
the night for a bowel movement, others will wait until morning —either way
is normal. SATURDA Y ROUTINEBefore you can reset your agni, it is necessary first to lower it. This is
done by not eating meals and only drinking liquids during the day. Vata and
Pitta types shou ld drink fruit juice diluted with warm water. Apple or grape
juice are good; orange juice is too acidic. Drink one glass of juice at
breakfast, at lunch, and at dinnertime; three or four more can be taken
between meals, but do not drink more than that unless it’s water. The aim is
to have no appe tite and only a minimum of calories to digest. Kapha types
can follo w this routine or drink only warm water, if they are comfortable
with that. Spend the day reading, watchin g TV, or performing light activi ty. A short
walk in the morning and in the afternoon is a good idea. Do not travel any
distance or undertake heavy physical tasks. If you run or exercise heavily,
skip it for a day and relax. If you feel faint with hunger, take one tables poon of honey with a glass of
warm water and lie down for five minutes. It is normal to feel lightness in your limbs, but if you start to tremble or
feel dizzy, lie down and rest. If the feeling persists, eat a small meal. You
may be unsettled from unusually high stress that has thrown you of f balance. SUNDA Y ROUTINE
Now you want to restart your agni and let it adjust itself to its normal
cycle. To do this, eat a light breakfast of hot cereal (oatmeal, cream of rice,
or cream of wheat) with a little butter, milk, and sugar. Herb tea is also good
in the morning to soothe the stomach—licorice root for Vatas, peppermint
for Pittas and Kaphas. If you followed the program correctly on Saturday,
this will be all the breakfast you’ll want. If you still feel very hungry, have
more cereal or a glass of juice. Coffee, tea, and cigarettes will throw off your
agni rhythm and defeat your purpose. (Kapha types, who are slow starters in
the morning, can drink gotu kola tea as a stimulant—this herb is sold in
health-food stores. ) Do not eat again until noon. At exactly noon, have a good lunch, one that satisfies you without being
heavy or immoderate. It is best not to excite your digestion with salty or
spicy food or alcohol, but do not have just a salad and water, either. Ginger
tea is a good idea. If you are Vata and have no appetite, drink it before the
meal; otherwise, during or after the meal is fine. If you do not have ginger
tea, sip a glass of warm water with your meal. Do not eat again until dinner. Have an early dinner (at least three hours before you go to bed), eating a
nourishing meal that suits your body type. Make this meal smaller than
lunch. Rice, lentils, and steamed vegetables are good. Even a repeat of
breakfast would be good for most Kaphas and Pittas, or for anyone who
tends to overeat. Now that your agni is reset, your hunger cycle will naturally tend to make
you want
a light breakfast
a substantial lunch, eaten at the same time every day
a light supper, eaten early and at the same time every day
The following things will throw your agni off again and should be
avoided. Eating between meals. The rule here is not to stimulate your appetite if
you are not going to eat. Agni likes to finish what it starts; therefore, it
is thrown of f by empty stimulation from chewing gum, hard candy, or
breath mints taken throughout the day. However, having tea and
cookies in the afternoon is a good idea for Vata types or for anyone who
gets fatigued at the end of the workday. Strong stimulants. Caf feine, salt, and alcohol are strong stimulants and
should be taken moderately. The indigestion most people feel at a
cocktail party comes from the mixing of salty food, alcohol, and noise. If you like to drink cof fee, always have it with food, not alone. The
same applies to salt and alcohol. Being addicted to any of these
stimulants makes it impossible to balance the digestion. Skipping meals. Agni wants something to do three times a day and
resents it if you do not eat. Kapha types can skip meals because their
agni moves slowly and burns low, but it is still a good rule to eat three
times a day. AGNI AND AMA
The Ayurvedic ideal is that agni be kept operating efficiently under all
conditions; it must not be so cold that food is not complete ly digested. Partially digeste d food turns into ama, a cold, foul-smelling residue whose
“stickiness” prevents the doshas from circulating freely as they should. There is also the opposite dange r that agni will burn too high, in which case
the nutrients in food will not be extracted but burned away. Then digestion
becomes feverish, leading to weakness instead of strength. Agni and ama form the most important pair of opposites in the body,
making the difference between a state of dynamic health and a state of slow
deterioration. The most obviou s difference between the two is that agni
makes you feel well, while ama makes you feel sick. There are some specific
signs as well. Agni gives one:
Glowing complexion and bright eyes
Strong digestion without constipation or diarrhea
Ability to eat all foods
Clear, straw-colored urine
Normal feces without strong smellIf there is ama in the body, it can vary from a minor to a major serious
condition. Among the earlier signs are:
Dull skin and eyes
Unpleasant taste in the mouth, with coated tongue in the morning
Strong bad breath
Urine that is cloudy, dark, or discolored
Weak digestion, chronic constipation and/or diarrhea
Loss of appetite (food tastes bad)
Aching joints
Once the digestive fire has returned to normal and the collected ama from
the past is flush ed out, agni by itself will continue to purify the body. Your
digestion is self-correcting, because nature has set things up so that agni
burns ama. This is another example of how you can trust your body to know
what to do. IMPROVING YOUR AGNI
Certain foods, spices, and herbs are effective in improving the quality of
agni in everyone, according to Ayurveda. They are used to stimulate appetite,
increase the power of digestion, and remove ama. GINGER
Dried into a powder or used fresh, ginger is praised as the best spice for
helping the agni of all body types. Powdered ginger, sold in grocery-store
spice racks, is stronger, more drying, and more pungent than fresh
gingerroot, which is sold in the fresh produce department (or in health-foodstores if your supermarket does not carry it). Fresh ginger is considered the
better digestive aid. Ginger can be used in various ways:
As a tea. Boil a large pinch of dry ginger in a cup of water over a low
flame until a quarter of the water boils away, then strain. This tea is drunk
before meals to whet the appetite. A small glass of it can be sipped during or
after meals to aid digestion. Fresh ginger tea is made by first boiling your water and then, with the heat
off, dropping in a few thin slices of unpeeled gingerroot (about one
tablespoon per cup of water). Allow to steep for five minutes, then strain. You can make a much stronger tea by boiling the slices of gingerroot with
the water, but this would be considered a medicinal tea, not to be drunk
every day. As a spice. Ayurveda recommends a variety of ways to use ginger in
cooking. Either the powder or the root can be added to recipes for steamed
vegetables, curri es, gingerbread, cakes, and cookies. You can lightly sprinkle
ginger on your food at the table or chew on a sliver of fresh ginger during
the meal. Although it may be too strong for everyone, scatter ing chopped
gingerroot over your food as a garnish (like parsley) is also considered
worthwhile. Try one approach at a time, however; it does not take much
ginger to kindle agni. Fresh ginger tea aids digestion. Different body types are advised to take ginger in slightly different ways:
Vata types can mix the choppe d fresh root with salt. Pitta types need less
pungency, so weak ginger tea is enough for them, sweetened with sugar to
make the ginger less spicy. Kapha types (and anyone who is overweight)
want it for eliminating excess Kapha from the system, so they can take a
good deal of ginger tea sweetened with honey. If your appetite and/or digestion become poor as the result of nervousness,
stress, or illness, an excellent way to restore it is with the following ginger
routine. Ginger Routine
In a small glass, metal, or ceramic bowl, mash four tablesp oons each
powdered ginger, brown sugar, and ghee (melted, clarified butter, see page
304). Mix to a uniform consistency, cover, and store in a cool place. Take a little bit of this ginger mixture every day before breakfast, making
sure that you follow it with a good breakfast (hot cereal, grape juice,
muffins, and herb tea with cinnamon in it is a good menu). Consume the
ginger mixture according to the following schedule. After finishing the ginger routin e, your digestion should be norm alized. If
you still experience digestive difficulty, see a doctor; at the first sign of
digestive cramps and pain, do not attempt this routine—consult a physician
instead. Ginger Follow-up
If you are trying to cure a long-standing Vata imbalance or want to keep
your digestion at its peak, takin g a little fresh ginger every day is a good
idea. It is also considered the best preventive against build ing up ama
through improper digestion. Cut a thin, nicke l-sized slice from the end of a fresh gingerroot, cut off the
peel, and chop very fine. Add a few drops of lemon juice and a pinch of salt. Eat this mixture a half-hour before lunch and dinner to stimulate your
digestion. If that is incovenient, the mixture can be eaten just before the
meal. GHEEGhee, or clarified butter, is prized because it increases agni without
simultaneously fueling Pitta. Ghee in fact is considered excellent for
balancing Pitta. Kapha types generally need to avoid too much oil of any
kind, but ghee is the best for them, too. Ghee is used:
As a cooking oil. Small amounts of ghee are good for sautéing vegetables
(not for deep-fr ying). Ghee does not work as well as butter in baking—
breads and desserts need the moisture and milk solids in regular butter. As a flavoring in place of butter. Since ghee is a prepared food, using
butter is not the same as using ghee. Where you would ordina rily butter a
vegetable dish or a baked potato or mix it into your oatmeal, ghee is a better
choice. As a digestive. Drizzle a teaspoon of ghee over food at the table (more is
not better, since too much oil of any type is not healthy). How to Make Ghee
Place one pound unsalted butte r in a one-quart saucepan over low heat. Allow to melt completely, then raise heat to medium. Skim off foam as it
rises. When the butter starts to boil, giving off its water conten t, lower heat
again and cook slowly for abou t ten minutes. The ghee is done when all the
moisture has cooked out and the milk solids at the bottom of the pan have
turned light golden brown (there will also be a nutty aroma, but no hint of
burning). Remov e from heat, let cool, and pour into a clean glass jar or bowl. Ghee keeps indefinitely in the refrigerator but can also be stored at cool or
even room temperature for several weeks. OTHER SPICES FOR GOOD AGNI
Herbs and spices can be selected for each body type, as we did in the
Vata-, Pitta-, and Kapha-pacify ing diets. But certain ones are good for
generally improving the quality of agni. (Pitta types have to be careful to use these in small amounts, since they
tend to increase Pitta dosha. ) Building up excess Kapha will make digestion difficult by decreasing
agni; it is also bad for buildin g up ama, since both are cold, heavy, and
viscous. Using bitter and pungen t herbs will reduce Kapha and also “scrape”
ama out of the tissues. Ayurve da specifically recommends bitter taste for
purification. Among the more common spices that attack ama are:
As you can see, these are some of the spices recommended for stimulating
agni. The regula r but moderate use of these flavorings in your cooking will
help prevent ama from forming. Chewing fennel seed after a meal and
sweetening your herb tea with raw, uncooked honey are also standard
practices for balancing agni. A BLISSFUL DIET
If bliss is basic to life, there should be a physical counterpart for it in the
body, and indeed there is. According to Ayurveda, the body’ s counterpart to
pure joy is a subtle substance called ojas, which is extrac ted from food once
it has been perfectly digested. Like the doshas, ojas is just on the edge of
being physical; one could call it a subtle substance that registers on both
mind and body. The final and most valuable result of eating a good diet is toextract every drop of this subtle substance from your food. That enables the
cells to “feel happy,” to experience the cellular equivalent of bliss. Twenty years ago, the idea of a happy cell would have made little sense in
scientific terms. Now we know that the body in fact is capable of generating
a complex network of chemic als (neurotransmitters, neuropeptides, and
related molecules) that the brain uses to communicate emotions throughout
the body. It is also known that a single meal can change the brain’ s
biochemistry quite radically. A brain chemical connected with feelings of
well-being, such as serotonin, goes up and down in response to the food
being digested in the intestinal tract. This has opened up the exciting
possibility of a “food pharmacy ” to correct depression, anxiety, and other
mental disorders, just as fiber helps to correct cholesterol. In Ayurveda we can bypass the bewildering complexity of brain
chemistry. Natur e has given us ojas, a single substance for happiness that the
body makes all the time. THE SA TTVIC DIET
Ideally, any food you eat is turne d into ojas. At the breast, a baby naturally
turns his mother ’s milk into ojas, but it would take a remarkable digestive
tract to produc e ojas from three-day -old leftover pizza. An excellent,
balanced diet can be planned around the foods that turn into ojas with the
least effort on your body’ s part. Ayurveda calls these the sattvic, or pure,
foods. To this list one often sees added wheat, mung beans, coconut, oranges,
dates, and honey. You do not need to be compulsive about these few foods,
or eat them exclusively. Just include them in your diet on a regular basis. On
a more general level, a sattvic diet contains:
Light, soothing, easily digested food
Fresh produce
Spring water
Balance of all six tastes
Moderate portions
According to Ayurveda, this is the best diet for physical strength, a good
mind, good health, and longevi ty. It is conducive to happines s and loving
emotions becau se it is in tune with nature as a whole. The list of sattvic
foods is short and would not fulfill a normal person’ s dietary requirements,
although if well managed, a diet limited to milk, vegetables, rice, and fruit
would certainly be excellent for one’s health. The famous Duke University
rice diet, based only on boiled rice and fruit, is recognized as an effective
therapeutic regime for heart patients, diabetics, and obese people. Milk is currently unfashionable among health-conscious people, who tend
to link it with digestive problem s, allergies, and high cholesterol. Ayurveda
holds that most of the objections to milk have to do with consuming it
improperly. Milk should be boiled before drinking, which makes it more
digestible. It can be drunk hot, warm, or cool, but never ice cold, straight out
of the refrigerat or. Milk should not be taken with tastes that conflict with it
(pungent, sour, salty) but only with other sweet foods (such as grains, sweet
fruits, and cereals). Whenever possible, drink milk from organic dairies that
do not use hormones or pesticides and have a stated commitment to treat
their cows compassionately. Sweet foods aside, it is recomm ended that you drink milk alone rather
than with your meals, since this is easier on your digestive tract. Low-fatmilk may be best for Kapha types, but whole milk is preferred for all other
body types (unless there is a problem with high cholesterol, in which case
skim milk is best). If you still have trouble digesting milk after it is boiled,
or if it seems to create mucous congestion, try adding two pinches of either
turmeric or dry ginger before boiling (adding a little raw sugar or honey will
cut the bitter taste of the turm eric). These measures remove most of the
current objections to milk, which Ayurveda traditionally considers an
excellent food for bodily strengt h, longevity, and peace of mind. Cow’ s milk
is favored above others as the most sattvic. To move in the direction of a more sattvic diet, try having your next plate
of pasta with butter, cream, and Parmesan cheese instead of tomato sauce
with meat, onions, and garlic. Any such change, even for one or two meals,
should amply demonstrate that sattvic eating makes digestion easier, gives
you more energy after you eat, and infuses a light, buoyant feeling
throughout the body. (If you want to measure this difference accurately,
don’t drink alcohol with your meals while you are experimenting. ) If your
cholesterol is elevated, go easy on the butter and cream; tossing the pasta
with olive oil, fresh basil, and a touch of Parmesan is a delicious substitute. Another example of a sattvic food is sweet lassi, an excellent digestive aid
that can be drunk during mild or warm weather (it may tend to promote
excessive Kapha in the chill of winter). Sweet Lassi
For four people, place a scant quarter teaspoon of cardamom, a pinch of
saffron threads, and three tablespoons of hot water in a blender. Blend for
ten seconds. Add two cups plain yogurt, two cups cool water, and two
tablespoons sugar; blend until smooth. If your mixture tastes too sharp, add a
quarter cup heavy cream. Adding a few drops of rose water at the end is
quite sattvic and cools Pitta (rose water is available at Indian and Middle
Eastern groceries and many health-food stores). BITS—BODY INTELLIGENCE TIPS
In Ayurveda, how you eat is just as important as what you eat. The reason
goes back to ojas, which is the end product of all the signals that reach your
body during a meal. Although eating food that tastes good is important, the
other senses— sight, hearing, touch, and smell—also need to send signals
that make your body happy; that is the only way to completely make use of
the mind body connection. An attractive plate of food served steaming hot
from the kitchen sends all the right signals to nourish the doshas, but if you
leave that plate on the table for five hours, it will be unfit to eat, despite the
fact that its raw nutrients have not significantly changed. Your whole body is tremendously alert while you are eating. Your
stomach cells are aware of the conversation at the dinner table, and if they
hear harsh words, the stomach will knot with distress. Then everything you
digest at that meal will be affected, because you have taken in indigestible
sounds. Your stomach cells cann ot literally hear, but the brain, taking in what
the ears hear, sends out chemical messages to update the stomach and every
other organ. So you cannot fool any part of your digestive tract into thinking
that a tense meal is a happy one; your “gut feelings” know better. According to Ayurveda, your duty to your body is to nourish every cell in
it in every way— that is the larger purpose of a sattvic diet. If you are careful
about nourishing your cells completely, they will reward you with ojas, the
perfect expression of their satisfaction. To make that happen, I have provided
sixteen BITS, or Body Intelligence Tips, each of which helps to expand the
satisfaction your body derives from eating. As you follow these BITS, you will be surprised at how much more
enjoyment every meal can give you. Your body can bubble with joy after
every breakfast, lunch, and dinner, once you know the secret of turning food
into ojas. BITS—BODY INTELLIGENCE TIPS
Eat in a settled atmosphere. Never eat when you are upset. Always sit down to eat. Eat only when you feel hungry. Reduce ice-cold food and drink. Don’ t talk while chewing your food. Eat at a moderate pace, neither too fast nor too slow. Wait until one meal is digested before eating the next (i. e. , intervals of
two to four hours for light meals, four to six for full meals). Sip warm water with your meal. Eat freshly cooked meals whenever possible. Minimize raw foods—cooked food (preferably well cooked) is much
easier to digest. Do not cook with honey—heated honey is considered to produce ama. Drink milk separately from meals, either alone or with other sweet
foods. Experience all six tastes at every meal. Leave one-third to one-quarter of your stomach empty to aid digestion. Sit quietly for a few minutes after your meal. This concise list gives you a great head start on getting the most out of
any diet. The basic principle here is that food that is easiest to digest is best
for you, which explains why well-cooked food is preferred over raw, hot
over cold, fresh over processed. Making digestion easier is also the reason
for sipping warm water with your meal, eliminating milk, and sitting brieflyat the table once you are finishe d eating in order for your body to settle into
its digestive rhythms. Another important principle is moderation. Moderate amounts of food are
taken at regular mealtimes—the Ayurvedic texts consider a double handful
of food to be an ideal portion. Take this amount as a first serving and go
back for more if you still feel hungry. It is advisable to leave one-third to
one-quarter of your stomach empty at the end of your meal. Your digestive
tract will work more efficiently on smaller portions, and your body will find
it much easier to control its weight automatically. Don’ t be afraid that you
will walk away from the table hungry. Being satisfied is not the same as
being stuffed. If you leave a little empty room in your stomach, you will feel
light, buoyant, energetic, and much fresher an hour after you eat. That is how
a properly eaten meal feels, leading naturally to a properly digested one. BITS for Weight Loss
If you have a problem with overweight, try using these BITS before going
on any kind of calorie-cutting diet. You will be surprised to find that your
excess weight is caused not just by what you’ve been eating but by how
you’ve been eating it— carelessly or compulsively, on the run instead of
sitting down, between meals instead of at regular hours. These are simple
things, of course, but they make a big dif ference. Leaving aside the very small minority who actually have a hormone or
metabolic problem, most overweight people are the victims of conditioning
—bad habits that have been unconsciously built into their bodies over time. Everyone’ s body has the intellig ence to know the right amount to eat; nature
gave us the hunger reflex to tell us when our bodies want food and its
opposite, the satiation reflex, to tell us when our stomachs are satisfied. People who have lost these instincts have surrendered an important aspect of
their body’s intelligence. They eat like machines, switched on by automatic
cues—the sight and smell of food, or just the thought of it. But by following
these BITS they can return to “conscious eating,” guided by their body’ s
inner intelligence. WHEN OJAS IS LESS
Besides overeating, other abuses at the table can suppress our healthy
instincts for eating. If you consume a meal while feeling angry, an Ayurvedic
doctor would say that you are producing mental ama from your food, while a
Western physici an would say that a stress reaction is throwing off your
endocrine balanc e. The end result is the same, a damaging chemical message
going straight to your cells. Even before you eat the first bite of food, disturbances in the doshas can
negate your body’s attempt to produce ojas. As usual, Vata dosh a comes into
play here—wha tever throws off Vata dosha also damages ojas—worry, loud
noise, going without sleep, and drastic diets and fasting. On the positive side,
anything that calms Vata during mealtimes is good for ojas. Most people do not eat a strict ly sattvic diet in this country, so I would
like to give a few more reasons why changing to one would benefit your
health. You will notice that a sattvic diet is vegetarian, and it is now common
knowledge that vegetarians have excellent blood pressure (18 percent lower
than average) and lower rates of heart disease and cancer. In addition, the
federal governm ent has warned us for twenty-five years that Americans eat
far too much salt, protein, and animal fat, most of which come s from meat
(much of the excess salt also comes from processed foods). If you started
reducing your meat intake today, moving gradually in the direction of a
meatless diet, you would almost certainly lessen your chance of having a
heart attack in the future. By including sweet foods on the list, Ayurveda
does not mean to condone the huge amounts of refined white sugar that most
of us now consume. The sweetness of pasta, rice, and bread is enough. Like everything else, there are two extremes in diet. Certain foods are not
easily turned into ojas; among them are the following:
Non-Ojas Diet
Meat, poultry, and fishHeavy and oily foods
Cheese
Leftovers and processed food
Excess of sour, salty tastes
Overeating
For the sake of economy and convenience, many cooks like to save
leftovers, but Ayurveda frowns on this practice. Food is meant to be eaten
fresh, right off the stove if not right out of the garden—the fresher the
produce, the more the ojas. Old, cold food, even when reheated, will not
produce ojas in the same amou nts. Frozen food in general is also good to
avoid. Drinking alcohol and smoking cigarettes destroys ojas and prevents
other foods from producing it. Air and water pollution are equally
detrimental. All of these influences are called tamasic, which means that
they produce dullness and inertia by promoting the buildup of ama. Kapha
types should be especially wary, since their naturally slow digestion makes it
easier for ama to form. Finally, here are a few time-ho nored rules about a blissful diet handed
down in the Ayurvedic tradition, each aimed at maximizing ojas. Eat fresh food suitable to the season and your geographical area. The
best possible foods for the body are fruits, vegetables, and dairy
products raised in your area— foods have thrived on the same air,
water, nutrients, and sunlight that you grow on. Have your lar gest meal at lunch, when digestion is strongest. Dinner
should be a modest meal that can be digested before bedtime; breakfast
is optional and in any case should be your smallest meal of the day. Eat at the same time every day. Besides not snacking, avoid eating at
night, which disturbs your digestive rhythms and easily promotes ama
as you sleep from the food that is undigested. Dine either alone or with people you genuinely like. Negative emotions,
whether yours, the cook’ s, or those of the people around you, have a
harmful ef fect on digestion. Be grateful for nature’ s unending gift of food, and respect it as you do
yourself. OceanofPDF. comCHAPTER 13
EXERCISE—THE MYTH OF “NO P AIN, NO GAIN”
From an Ayurvedic standpoint, much of the exercise recommended today
falls short of ideal. Why do we need physical activity in the first place. Charaka, the greatest writer on Ayurveda, gave this answer: “From physical
exercise one gets lightness, a capacity for work, firmness, tolerance of
difficulties, elimination of impurities, and stimulation of digestion. ”
Aerobics for your heart or weight training for your muscles achieve some of
these goals, but these are not comprehensive enough activities to fit
Charaka’ s description. The ideal is to balance the whole system, mind and
body. It is also vital that exercise give more energy than it takes, a
consideration that people tend to ignore. One very simple exercise, walking, comes close to being ideal because it
is a natural activity that satisfies all three doshas. Vata types find that taking
a long walk tranquilizes them. Pitta types react quite differently. They like
being slowed down from the driving pace that so often overtakes them
during their workday. Kaphas feel stimulated and lighter; a brisk walk
clears out any minor congestion they might have built up and makes their
typically slow digestion more efficient. For these reasons, a brisk half-hour
walk every day is one of the prime recommendations we make to patients at
the Chopra Center. Patients are also taught a new approach to exercise in which the aim is
not to strain or to pound their muscles into shape. They are shown that
exercise is meant to forge a closer link between themselves and their
quantum mecha nical bodies—it thus becomes a powerful tool for balance. We call this approach “three-d osha exercise. ” It is embodied in a set of
short, connected routines:The Sun Salute ( Surya Namaskara )—a morning exercise that
combines stretching, balance, and calisthenics (1 to 6 minutes)
Neuromuscular integration—a set of gentle yoga positions (10 to 15
minutes)
Balanced breathing—a simple form of Pranayama, a traditional yogic
breath exercise (5 minutes)
The description of these exercises begins on page 325. Performing them
in connection with meditation, for which they are ideally suited, raises mind
body integration to a new level. To begin with, these exercises are natural
and comfortable forms of activity that the doshas welcome. They can also
be performed by all age groups and do not require you to be in shape. From the very first session, people discover the intimacy that nature has
established between awareness and physiology. The body is not just a shell
or a walking life-support system. It is your self intimately clothed in matter. Getting back in touch with this intimacy is very reassuring and delightful,
particularly for people who have given up on exercise and become virtual
strangers to their bodies. SUCCESS WITHOUT PAIN
Before explaini ng these points further, let’s consider conventional
exercise. Since life is generally meant to be comfortable and happy,
Ayurveda views exercise as a means to that end. It holds that exercise
should always leave you ready for work. Exercise shouldn’ t be work itself. Yet, many Americans see it that way. They feel that without a grim and
determined attitude, they are not doing much good for themse lves. (Go to
the park early tomorrow mornin g and count how many frowns there are on
the faces of the runners you see. ) If you get only one benefit from
Ayurveda’ s approach to exercise, it should be that “no pain, no gain” is a
myth. A good way to see this is in terms of Vata dosha. All physica l activity
increases Vata. A moderate increase makes you feel more vigorous, alert,
and clearheaded, as well as stronger physically. You are getting mental and
physical benefits together, in a natural balance. But overstimulating Vata
destroys all these benefits. It makes you feel restless, fatigued, and shaky. How much is enough, then. As a general rule, Ayurveda wants us to
exercise to 50 percent of maximum capacity. If you can bicycle ten miles,
go for five; if you can swim twenty laps, make it ten. These lower limits are
not detrimental to fitness; in fact they make exercise more efficient, because
you are not givin g your body so much repair work to do afterwa rd, and your
cardiovascular system will have an easier time returning to normal after
your workout. Another simple guideline has to do with exertion. Rather
than exerting yourself to the point where you are sweating heavily and
panting for breath, just go until you break out into a light sweat and start to
mouth breathe. Those are natural signals that you are at the right limit. You are going too far if you begin to pant or sweat profusely, if you feel
your heart pounding violently, or if your knees feel rubbery. At the first sign
of overe xertion, stop exercising, give yourself a few minutes of walking
around to let the system cool down by stages, and then rest for another few
minutes until your pulse and breathing are back to normal. In the heat of
competitive sports such as tenni s and racquetball, you may not notice how
strenuously you are exerting yourself. If it is fun to play, then keep on. But
if you are pushi ng yourself to win the game or to prove that you can keep
up with someone else, your attitude is needlessly punishing your body. Vata types especially should be careful not to overdo; their constitutions
generally have lower exercise thresholds than Pittas, and Pittas lower than
Kaphas. Exertio n also needs to be adjusted for age: over the age of 45 or 50,
everyone begins to have increased Vata, which should be comp ensated for
by not exercising as hard as before. As in everything else, you need to
respect your doshas. Section summary:
This passage discusses aspects related to maintaining overall wellness via optimal consumption patterns tailored towards individual constitutional typologies, i. | [
{
"A": "Warm milk",
"Q": "What is a recommended drink to have with Pitta or Kapha imbalance?"
},
{
"A": "Eat a light breakfast, then wait until noon to eat a satisfying lunch, and have an early and light dinner",
"Q": "What is the recommended way to reset the digestive fire (agni) on a Saturday?"
},
{
"A": "Fermented foods, such as pickles, yogurt, and cheese",
"Q": "Which type of food is considered bad for Pitta or Kapha imbalance?"
},
{
"A": "Eat when hungry, eat slowly, and chew your food thoroughly",
"Q": "What is the recommended approach to digestion, according to Ayurveda?"
},
{
"A": "Exercise should not be overstimulating, and it's recommended to stop and rest if you feel the need to, as excessive exertion can lead to negative effects on the body.",
"Q": "What is the recommended approach to exercise, according to Ayurveda?"
}
] |
Going the extra mile at any age is just another way of
inviting serious Vata problems. (Recent studies in sports medicine indicate
that 50 percent of serious women athletes have significant menstrual
disturbances, a symptom of highly aggravated Vata. )BODY -TYPE EXERCISE
Every time you move your body , you are talking to your doshas. Because
each dosha has its own emphasis, there are three kinds of benefits that all
balanced exercise brings:
Vata: poise, agility , limberness, coor dination, and inner exhilaration
Pitta: warming up the body , circulation of blood to all parts, increased
heart capacity
Kapha: increased strength and stability , steady ener gy
If you never get out of your armchair to exercise, obviously you will not
experience these benefits. But many active people with firm muscles and
sound hearts do not experience them either . Most exercise programs today
are dedicated to increasing the capacity of the cardiovascular system, which
puts a heavy emphasis on Pitta dosha. I would like to list balanced activities
that are broader in scope and more suited to the major body types. VATA-TYPE EXERCISE
Vata types have bursts of energy but tire quickly . They excel at balancing
and stretching exercises. Being light and lithe, they like yoga and walking,
as long as these do not beco me too tiring. Because of their natural
enthusiasm, Vata types also feel good doing bouncy dance aerobics to
music. Any exercise that takes place indoors is good in winter , since Vatapeople are averse to the cold and do not have enough fat and muscle to
protect them from the elements. Everyone dominated by Vata must always be careful not to get carried
away and push themselves too far. This is the primary caution for them,
since Vata dosha typically starts with a bang but does not know its limits,
particularly when out of balance. Half an hour of mild exercise a day is
enough. If you are exhausted, trembling, dizzy , or on the verge of cramping,
you have gone much too far . These are all signs of Vata imbalance. PITT A-TYPE EXERCISE
Pitta types tend to have more drive than endurance. They are good at all
exercise in moderation. Because they like a challenge above all, Pittas enjoy
skiing, hiking, mountain climbing, and other sports that bring a sense of
accomplishment at the end of the day . Athletes in competitive sports must have a good deal of Pitta to give
them a fighting spirit, but this is not the dosha for intense competition. Pittas hate to lose; this motivates them more than the satisfaction of
winning. (Sports studies have shown this among professional tennis players,
some of whom are notorious for Pitta-type anger .) Pittas will grimly make
themselves run, jog, or weight train but gain very little inner contentment
from their ef forts. Probably you already know whether you are falling into this trap. If you
stew over every bad shot on the golf course or want to drill your tennis
opponent with the ball, give up these sports. If you chew yourself or anyone
else out in any sport, walk away from it. Anyone who needs to killsomebody on the court is suffering from gross Pitta imbalanc e. Also, the
start-stop rhythm of competition sports is not as good for your body as half
an hour of continuous motion. Walking briskly for half an hour a day will take the feistiness out of your
system better than a competitive sport. Swimming is even better—many Pitta types who drive themselves on the
job find that a plunge in the pool at five o’clock cools them off and
dissolves the day’s tensions. Winter sports of all kinds also appeal to Pittas
because they take to the cold better than Vata and Kapha types. Because
they are stimulated visually , Pittas gain a large benefit from a leisurely stroll
in the woods; it provides a change from their usual determined pace. The
beauty of nature will sink deep into them when they pause long enough to
experience it. KAPHA-TYPE EXERCISE
Kapha types have strong, steady energy but often lack agility. They
generally are good at all exerc ises and become better when they become
more limber and balanced. Because of their physical strength, Kaphas excel
at endurance sports—they have the natural build for a long run or distance
rowing. The combination of Pitta and Kapha gives determination and
endurance. This is a common prakruti among professional baseball and
football players.Pushing the blood through their veins feels good to Kaphas, which is why
they take to weight training in gyms and health clubs. It is good to combine
this with exercis e that gets the circulation going; bringing up a good sweat
(without exhaus tion) will clear out Kapha congestion. Many Kaphas have
excess fat and water that need to be pushed out. Being a cold dosha, Kapha
resents it if you go out into the cold and damp to run or row. In winter ,
Kapha types should stay indoors and stick with aerobics or calisthenics. Dance classes provide a good alternative for Kaphas. Although a Kapha
may not have a dancer ’s build, they feel much better about their natural
shape, once they gain the poise and balance that dance training instills. A few general pr ecautions apply to all body types. Do not exercise:
Just befor e or after a meal. Exercising at these times lowers your agni,
which you want at its highest. Allow at least half an hour before a meal
and one to two hours afterward without exercising. Walking right after
a meal, however , is an exception. Taking a leisurely fifteen-minute
walk after lunch and/or dinner stimulates digestion (anything longer or
harder would compete with it). Exercising after sundown is
discouraged by Ayurveda; it is better to let your body slow down in the
evening and prepare itself for bed. In the wind or the cold. Both Vata and Kapha dosha resent the cold, as
we have mentioned. If you go out for a walk in winter , keep yourself
bundled up and do not breathe strenuously . Heavy breathing of cold,
damp air is bad for the respiratory tract. Also, any strong wind upsets
Vata dosha and removes the calming ef fect of a good walk. In the br oiling sun. The reason only mad dogs and English-men go out
in the noonday sun is that harsh sun inflames Pitta dosha, raising your
body heat at a time when exercise is raising it enough already . Along with moderation, the key to balanced exercise is regularity . The
doshas always tend to reinforce themselves. If you have neglec ted physical
activity for a while, your body will be used to inertia. Once you return to
even a little activity, your doshas will rise to a level of better balance andwant to stay there. So, do everything you can to start a progra m that you
will enjoy for years, preferably for life. THREE-DOSHA EXERCISES
Now I would like to describe the three-dosha exercises taught at our
Center: the Sun Salute, the set of gentle yoga positions, and balanced
breathing. More people in the West are becoming familiar with these
postures and discovering the benefits that have been appreciated in the East
for thousands of years. The following exercises are very easy to do. Only the Sun Salut e requires
some patience to master; the others do not take any special skill. The whole
emphasis on perfect performan ce is misplaced. These are exercises for
tuning in to your body . Anyone can do that, simply by letting the mind relax
into each pose. Don’ t even think of how you look or how close you are
coming to the ideal positions. Whatever you achieve is right for you. This
approach makes each exercise feel good as you do it and even better
afterward. Everyone feels pleas antly relaxed for the next few hours after
doing a short Ayurvedic routine. The following descriptions were provided by Bija Bennett, an expert,
talented yoga therapist who has taught yoga at many of our seminars over
the years. SUN SALUTE (Surya Namaskara)
Time: 1 to 2 minutes for each cycle, moving slowly
Repetitions: 1 to 6 cycles in the morning, mor e as you become experienced
The Sun Salute (Surya Namaskara) is a complete Ayurvedic exercise that
simultaneously integrates the whole physiology—mind, body , and breath. It
strengthens and stretches all the major muscle groups, lubricates the joints,conditions the spine, and mass ages the internal organs. Blood flow and
circulation is increased throughout the body . With regular practice, you will
gain stability , suppleness, flexibility , and grace. Here is a cycle of 12 postures. Perform them in a fluid sequence one right
after another . Synchronize each motion with the breath. Move smoothly
into each pose, breathing fully and easily so that each cycle takes about 1
minute. Start slowly , avoiding strain, and listen to your body as you gradually
increase the number of Sun Salute cycles you do. This step-by-step
progression eliminates the possibility of pulling or tiring your muscles,
especially if you haven’ t been exercising regularly . Stop when you notice
that you are breathing and perspiring heavily or feeling too tired. If this
occurs, lie down and rest for a minute or two until the breath is free. With
regular performance, your capacity will easily and naturally increase. In the Sun Salut e, a specific pattern of breathing is encouraged. Inhale to
extend your spine vertically or to open, lengthen, or fully elonga te the body . Exhale to bend or fold the body , creating a flexing of the spine. Each of
your movements should be an extension of the breath in order to facilitate
the motion. There is one transit ional position in the Sun Salut e where the
breath pauses for a moment before you continue into the next pose. Otherwise, let your breathing be fluid and continuous throughout the entire
exercise. HOW TO PERFORM THE SUN SALUTE
Perform the following postures in a flowing, moving sequence one right
after another . Remember to use the breath to connect each pose with the one
following it. Emphasize the expansion of the chest on inhale and the
contraction of the abdomen or belly in a bending motion on exhale. Salutation position ( Samasthiti ). Begin by standing tall with the feet
together in a parallel position. Stand evenly on both feet and lengthenthe spine upward. Place the palms of your hands together in front of
your chest. Lift the chest and expand the ribs as you look straight
ahead. Raised arm position ( Tadasana ). On the inhalation, slowly extend the
arms over the head. Lift and expand the chest as you continue
lengthening the spine while allowing the head to look upward. Keep
breathing evenly as you continue right into the next pose. Hand to foot position ( Uttanasana ). As you exhale, bend the body
forward and down, lengthening the spine, arms, and neck. Let the
knees soften or bend freely , bringing the hands to the floor . Avoid
collapsing the chest or overrounding the upper back. Keep the elbows
and shoulders relaxed, and don’ t lock the knees. Equestrian position ( Ashwa Sanchalanasana ). On your next
inhalation, extend the left leg back and drop the back knee to the
ground. The front knee is bent and the supporting foot remains flat on
the floor . Simultaneously extend or lift the spine and open the chest. Allow the head and neck to lengthen vertically .Figure 1. Salutation position.Figure 2. Raised arm position.Figure 3. Hand to foot position. Mountain position ( Adhomukha Svanasana ). On the exhalation,
bring the left leg back to meet the right leg—legs both at hip width
apart, hands at shoulder distance. As you raise the buttocks and hips,
press down with the hands, allowing the spine to release upward and
back. Stretch the heels down toward the floor and lengthen through the
backs of the legs. Relax and free the head and neck. The body forms an
even inverted V from the pelvis to the hands and from the pelvis to the
heels.Figure 4. Equestrian position. Eight limbs position ( Ashtanga Namaskara ). Gently drop both
knees to the ground and slowly slide the body down at an angle as you
bring the chest and chin to the ground. All eight limbs—both the toes,
knees, chest, hands, and chin—touch the floor . Hold this very briefly
and then continue to move into the next pose. Cobra position ( Bhujangasana ). On the inhalation, lift and expand
the chest forward and up as you press down with the hands. Keep the
elbows close to the body and continue to extend the spine upward. Open and widen the chest and move the shoulders down and away
from the ears to free the neck and head. Let the upper back widen and
lengthen. Do not initiate this movement with the head or lift the body
with the neck.Figure 5. Mountain position. Figure 6. Eight limbs position.Figure 7. Cobra position. Mountain position ( Adhomukha Svanasana ). Repeat position 5. On
the exhalation, raise the buttocks and hips, press down with the hands,
and allow the spine to release upward and back. Stretch the heels down
toward the floor and lengthen through the backs of the legs. Relax and
free the head and neck. Equestrian position ( Ashwa Sanchalanasana ). Repeat position 4. Inhale and swing the right leg forward between the hands. The left leg
stays extended back, knee to the ground.Figure 8. Mountain position. The front knee should be bent with the foot flat on the floor . Extend
the spine, lifting the chest forward and up. Allow the head and neck to
lengthen upward. Hand to foot position ( Uttanasana ). Repeat position 3. As you
exhale, step forward with the left leg and continue to bend the body
forward and down, lengthening the entire spine. The arms and head
follow in line with the spine. Both hands remain on the floor . Let the
knees soften or bend freely . Avoid collapsing the chest or overrounding
the upper back. Keep the elbows and shoulders relaxed.Figure 9. Equestrian position. Raised arm position ( Tadasana ). Repeat position 2. On the inhalation
lift the arms from the upper back as you open the chest forward and
up. Do not lift the body from the head or neck. Continue to lift and
expand the chest as you come up, extending the arms over the head. Keep the breathing smooth, deep, and continuous. Salutation position ( Samasthiti ). Repeat position 1. Exhale as you
lower the arms and bring the palms of your hands together in front of
your chest. You are standing tall with the feet in a parallel position at
hip distance. Lift the chest and expand the ribs as you look straight
ahead. Vertically lengthen the spine and neck.Figure 10. Hand to foot position. This completes one cycle of the Sun Salute. Hold the Salutation position while continuing to breathe for a few
breaths. Then begin the secon d cycle. This standing Salutation position
becomes positio n 1 of the second set. On the next inhalation, continue into
position 2—the raised arm position—and repeat the movements in a fluid
sequence.Figure 11. Raised arm position.Figure 12. Salutation position. On subsequent sets of the Sun Salute, you will alternate which foot is
extended back and which swings forward in positions 4 and 9—the
Equestrian posit ion. In the first cycle, the left foot extends back in positions
4 and 9, with the right foot forward. Alternate which leg extends back on
the next set and continue to alternate sides with each new cycle. After you have completed the sequence of Sun Salutes, lie on your back,
lengthen the spine, and let the body completely relax. Close your eyes and
rest for a minute or two. Allow your breath to be free and easy . YOGA POSITIONSTime: 10 to 15 minutes, moving slowly
Repetitions: 1 set in the morning and 1 set in the afternoon
The following easy poses, which take about 15 minutes to perform, are
considered the basic Ayurvedic exercise. A set can be practiced before
morning and afternoon meditati on, with or without the Sun Salute. These
positions are taught as part of the neuromuscular integration program at our
Center and are comfortable for anyone in good health, regardless of age or
previous physical training. What follows is a specific seque nce that begins with toning and warming
up the body . The set continues with seated and forward bends, standing
postures, inverted poses, backbending postures, twists, a restin g pose, and
ends with a short breathing exercise. Each of the postures in this sequence
has a specific therapeutic effect on the physiology . We will mention a few
of the well-known benefits of each pose, as given in the ancient texts. In general, the toning and warm-up exercises increase circulation and
improve blood flow to the entire body . Seated poses help to create stability ,
proper spinal alignment, and good posture, while the forw ard bends
stimulate digesti on, increase the spine’ s flexibility , and calm the physiology . Backbends create mobility and suppleness in the spine—especially in the
upper back—and at the same time are invigorating. Inverted poses stimulate
the endo crine system and allow for increased circulation, while twists aid
digestion, elimin ation, and tone the spinal column. All of these postures are
succeeded by the resting pose and breathing exercises, which bring
increased awareness, orderliness, and balance. A sequence of postures is important because it first prepares the body in
order to warm it up and remove stiffness. It progresses to invigorate,
strengthen, and stretch the entire body . This is why it is valuable to practice
in an orderly sequence, as each pose is a preparation for the following
posture or a counterbalance for the preceding one. Here are a few guidelines to follow befor e practicing:Perform the postures slowly , making sure you inhale and exhale, without
holding the breath or controlling it in any way. Breathing should be easy,
fluid, and continuous. No pain, most gain. If you can’ t touch your toes without excruciating
effort, do not push. Let the knees soften or bend freely . Never strain
or push the body in these exer cises. Hold the postures for a few
seconds and then release easily . Movements should be performed
slowly and comfortably . Never move in or out of the postures abruptly
or bounce in a pose. Use the breath to facilitate the movement. How far should you reach? In each pose, go to the point where you
feel the stretch. Just move as far as you easily can without ef fort. Allow your awareness to naturally go to the area of the body that is
being stretched. Don’ t overextend, force, or overstretch. Sometimes it
helps to release or back of f completely from the stretch, then easily
stretch it again. Do not forget to br eathe! Over the months you’ll notice increased strength, flexibility , and
suppleness. So it is not necessary to push the body to reach a desired
goal. In fact, these postures are not designed to impose a specific
structure on your body , and there is no “ideal” pose. Rather , your
progress comes from the integrated functioning of awareness,
movement, and breath. All Ayurvedic exercise involves the mind as well as the body . In each
exercise, a particular area is stretched. Allow your awareness to
naturally go to that area. The softening of the accumulated stress is
said to come from letting the attention be on the area of stretch. For that reason, allow the exercises to have your full attention. Don’ t play
the radio or TV in the background. Just let your mind be easily aware of
your body . Wear comfortable, loose clothing. Use a flat, nonslippery surface, but
avoid performing these exercises on a bare floor . Rather , use a folded
wool blanket, rug, exercise mat, or other semisoft surface.Note: It is important to mention that all postures should be adapted to
meet the needs of the individual. In certain situations, such as acute
illness, pregnancy , menstruation, and specific structural problems, the
posture may be adjusted or changed in order to be more ef fective and
to serve one’ s particular requirement. In any of these special cases,
please check with a qualified yoga instructor . I. TONING-UP EXERCISES (1 to 2 minutes)
We begin with a few exercises that invigorate and tone the body . The first
exercise consist s of progressively massaging the body with the hands and
fingers, moving in the direction of the heart. First come to a comfortable sitting position. Using the palms and
fingers of both hands, press the top of your head and gradually
continue to press and release with the hands moving forward over the
face and down the neck and chest. Again start at the top of the head
and press the head with the palms and fingers moving down and over
the back of the neck, coming around to the chest. Figure 1. Toning-up exer cise, head. To tone the hands and arms, begin by massaging the right side first. Grasp the fingers of the right hand with your left hand and continue to
press and release upward along the top of the right arm all the way to
the shoulder and across the chest. Repeat by pressing and releasing
along the underside of the right arm, from the hand up to the forearm,
shoulder , and chest. Your pressure should be firm and the massage
should be gradual and continuous. Repeat on the left side, making sure
to massage both the top and underside of the arm. Figure 2. Toning-up exer cise, hands. Bring the tips of the fingers to your navel and with both hands on the
belly , begin to press and release around the abdomen, gradually
moving the pressure up to the heart. Massage by pressing and releasing your lower back, kidney area, and
ribs, moving up toward the heart.Start with the right foot, grasping and massaging the toes, soles, and
tops of the feet, moving up the calves, thighs, hips, and stomach,
continuing the motion up toward the heart. Repeat on the left leg,
moving up to the hips and continuing all the way to the heart. Figure 3. Toning-up exer cise, feet. Lie on your back and lengthen the spine, keeping the head and neck
long and free. Bring the knees up to your chest, clasp your hands over
the knees, and begin to roll slowly and easily from side to side. Always
allow your neck to be relaxed and free. Breathe normally . Roll 5 times to each side and then release the arms and slowly extend
your legs out from the hips. Let the body be completely relaxed. Figure 4. Toning-up exer cise, side r oll. Figure 5. Toning-up exer cise, side r oll. II. SEA T FIRMING POSE— Vajrasana (30 seconds to 1 minute)
Begin by kneeling and sitting with the buttocks on the heels. The feet
should be slightly apart and the big toes crossed. Lengthen the spine,
widen the rib cage, and slightly lift the chest. The head and neck
should be long and free. Look straight ahead and breathe easily . Place
your hands in your lap with the right hand on top of the left, palms up. As you inhale, lift the buttocks of f the heels and come up to a kneeling
position. Keep the spine lengthened and the chest open and lifted. Relax the shoulders. On the exhalation, slowly lower the body and sit
back down on the heels. Repeat again smoothly , with even breaths. Move slowly . Breathe deeply and easily , keeping the front and back of
your body lively , long, and free. Benefits : This asana strengthens the pelvic region, removes tension from the
knees and ankles, and builds a strong foundation for the back. III. HEAD TO KNEE POSE— Janu Sirsasana (About 1 minute)Sit down and extend your legs straight out in front of you. Stretch
through the backs of the legs and heels, toes pointing up toward the
head. Figure 6. Seat-firming pose, starting position. Bend your left knee and place the sole of your left foot against the
inside of the right thigh. Inhale and lift your arms straight up from the upper back, stretching
them over your head. On the exhalation, bend your body forward and
down, elongating the spine. Keep lengthening the spine, arms, and
neck as you come forward. Avoid collapsing your chest or
overrounding your upper back. You may soften the front knee slightly
to further release your lower back. Hold the pose for a few breaths. Then inhale and release your arms
from the upper back, opening the chest forward and up as you bring
your arms over the head. Repeat again on the same side, moving
slowly and comfortably . Inhale as you raise your body and exhale as
you lower your arms down to your sides.Figure 7. Seat-firming pose, er ect position. Figure 8. Head to knee pose. Perform this posture on the other side. Fully extend your left leg in
front of you. Bend your right knee and place the sole of your right foot
against the inside of your left thigh.Breathe and move into the posture slowly . Exhale as you bend your
body forward and down and inhale as you come up. Then repeat the
pose again on the same side. Breathe normally and hold for a few
breaths without strain. After you come up, exhale and lower your arms
down to the sides. Benefits: This pose strengthens and relax es the spine, tones the abdome n,
liver, and spleen, and aids in digestion. IV. SHOULDER ST AND—Sarvangasana (Start by holding for 30
seconds; gradually increase to 2 minutes if you are comfortable in
the Pose.) Note of Caution: If you are a beginner or have stiffness or problems in the
upper back and neck, practice this posture with one or two blankets placed
under the shoulders to protect the neck, or do a half shoulder stand rather
than completely straightening the body in the full pose. Perform this posture
slowly . If you have a chronic back problem or high blood pressure, be sure
to check with your doctor before performing this pose. (Ayurveda advises
against standing on the head, as it can injure the brain, neck, and spine if
practiced improperly .) Lie on your back and press your arms and hands flat against the floor . Relax your shoulders and lengthen the spine. As you exhale, bend your knees and slowly raise your legs over the
waist. Push your palms against the floor and swing your knees up and
over your head. Bend the elbows, keeping them in toward the body
and in line with your shoulders. Support your back with your hands
above the hips. The elbows and the shoulders should create a stable
platform to support your body .Figure 9. Shoulder stand. Straighten your legs by lengthening through both heels and the balls of
your feet. Allow your spine to stretch up toward the ceiling. Fully
stretch your legs out from the hips to keep your body in a straight line
from the ankles to the shoulders. Extend the spine upward. If you choose to do the half shoulder stand, don’ t straighten your body
all the way . Support the weight of your body with your hands, while
making an angle with your legs. The feet point in the direction of the
head. ( Note : This is a shoulder stand, not a neck stand, so there should
be no strain in the neck or throat. This is very important.) Keep the
breath smooth and let your face relax. Hold the posture for a few
breaths, increasing the time you stay in this pose as is comfortable. Benefits : This asana enlivens the entire endocrine system, increases
circulation to the thyroid gland, relieves mental fatigue, brings flexibility tothe spine, and has a soothing ef fect on the body . V. PLOW POSE—Halasana (15 seconds to 1 minute)
Continue into this next posture as you exhale and bend from the pelvis
to bring both legs down over the head. Keep the legs stretching straight
out through the heels so that the legs are at a right angle to the torso. Let the spine lengthen to avoid overcurving the upper back. Keep your
breath smooth and continuous. Allow your legs to go back only as far as you feel comfortable,
without collapsing the spine or chest. Be careful not to put too much
strain on the neck. (If you feel pain, slowly release and come out of the
pose.) Now extend the arms straight out behind you in the opposite direction,
away from your legs and head. The torso should rest on the tops of the
shoulders, the hips maintaining a vertical line with the shoulder joints. Lengthen your spine. Figure 10. Plow pose, arms extended.Figure 1 1. Plow pose, arms behind head. Fold the arms over your head and hold for a few breaths. To come down, exhale, bend your knees, and support the lower back
with your hands. Slowly and easily uncurl the spine with the knees
bent until you are lying flat. Rest comfortably for a few moments. Be sure to let your breathing be smooth, especially in the Shoulder
Stand and Plow . The quality of your breath will be an indication of
whether you are straining or pushing too far . Benefits : The Plow pose strengthens and relaxes the back, neck, and
shoulders. It improves perform ance of the liver and spleen and removes
fatigue. Both the Shoulder Stand and the Plow stimulate and normalize
functioning of the thyroid gland. VI. COBRA POSE— Bhujangasana (30 seconds to 1 minute)
Lie facedown on your stomach, bring the feet together and the hands
directly under your shoulders, fingers pointing forward. Slightly
elongate the spine to protect your lower back.On the inhalation, lift and expand the chest forward and up as you
press down with the hands. Keep your elbows close in to the body and
continue to extend the spine upward. Open and widen the chest and
move the shoulders down and away from your ears to free the neck
and head. Let the upper back widen and lengthen. Hold for a few breaths, then exhale and come down slowly . Repeat the pose 1 to 3 times, beginning with the inhalation and lifting
from the chest. Be careful not to initiate this movement from your head
or lift the body with your neck. Keep the spine long and breathe
normally . Allow your breath to be fluid and easy . Exhale and slowly
come down. Let the body relax completely . Benefits : This pose stren gthens the back, stretches the abdominal musc les,
and is helpful with uterine and ovarian problems. Figure 12. Cobra pose. VII. LOCUST POSE— Salabhasana (30 seconds to 1 minute)Continue to lie facedown and stretch the arms back by your sides,
either next to your hips or under the thighs. Face your palms to the
ceiling. Bring your feet together and feel the entire back lengthen. Rest
your chin gently on the floor . On the inhalation, raise both legs, lengthening them out from your
hips. Keep lengthening the entire spine as the legs extend upward and
back. Stretch the thighs and keep both legs fully extended and straight. Keep breathing easily , hold for a few breaths, then release the legs
down slowly . Repeat the pose 1 to 3 times. Be careful not to hold the breath in this
pose. Use the inhalation to lift the legs. Keep lengthening the spine to
prevent straining or hyperextending the lower back. Don’ t force your body to try to achieve a perfect pose. You may wish
to raise one leg at a time, lengthening each leg out from the hips, then
progressing to raise both legs at once. Figure 13. Locust pose. Benefits : This posture strengthens the lower back, aids in digestion, and
benefits the bladder , prostate, uterus, and ovaries.VIII. SEA TED TWISTING POSE— Marichyasana (About 1
minute)
Sit with the legs extended straight out in front of you. Keep the spine
lengthened, the head and neck free. Bend your left knee and keep the sole of the foot on the ground. Bring
your heel toward the buttocks just above the inner part of the right
knee. The inner side of the your left foot should touch the inner side of
the outstretched right thigh. Actively extend your right leg straight out
in front of you, lengthening through the back of your leg and heel. Bring your left hand on the floor behind you, and the right arm on the
outside of the left knee. If it is dif ficult to do this, just grasp the knee
with your hand. Inhale, lift the rib cage, lengthen your spine vertically
upward, and as you exhale, twist from the base of your spine to the
left. Figure 14. Seated twisting pose. As you twist, keep opening the chest to the left and let your head
follow the movement of your spine, following in the direction of the
twist. Continue to elongate your spine and open your chest as you
breathe. Try not to collapse the front of your body . If you can
comfortably keep the spine long in this posture, continue to bring theleft hand around the back onto the right thigh. Go only as far as you
can without strain. Keep breathing normally and hold the pose for a few breaths. Release
slowly , then repeat on the other side. It is especially important to use
your breath in this pose and to allow the twist to come from the
exhalation. Always twist on a lengthened rather than a compressed
spine. Benefits : This posture increases circulation to the abdominal organs,
relieves tightness in the shoulders and upper back, stretches the neck, and
stimulates the adrenal glands, liver , and kidneys. IX. ST ANDING FOR WARD BEND— Uttanasana (UP to 1
minute)
Stand up and bring your feet together in a parallel position, about hip
distance apart. Stand evenly on both feet and lengthen the spine as you
lift and open your chest. Keep your head and neck long and free. Look
straight ahead and breathe normally . Allow your arms to hang loosely at your sides and keep the shoulders
relaxed. Look straight ahead and breathe normally .Figure 15. Standing forward bend. On the inhalation, slowly extend your arms over the head as you lift
and expand the chest. On the exhalation, bend the body forward and
down, lengthening the entire spine. The arms and head follow in the
same line with the spine. Let your knees soften or bend freely and
bring your hands to the floor . Keep your elbows and shoulders relaxed
and don’ t lock the knees. Keep breathing easily . Hold the pose for a few breaths. On the
inhalation, lift your arms from the upper back as you open the chest
forward and up. Come all the way up to a vertical position, arms over
your head. Exhale and lower your arms down to the sides. Benefits : This posture tones the liver, stomach, spleen, kidneys, and spine,
and soothes and cools the mind.Figure 16. Standing forward bend. X. AWARENESS POSE—Chitasana (At least 1 minute)
Lie down on your back so that both sides of the spine rest evenly on
the floor . Lengthen your legs away from the pelvis and let them fall open to the
sides. Release your head, neck, shoulders, and hips. Allow the arms to
rest loosely next to the body . Face your palms upward. Now let your body be completely relaxed. Close your eyes and rest for
at least 1 minute. Allow the breath to be easy and free. Benefits : This pose invigorates and refreshes both the body and the mind,
removes fatigue, and is soothing for the entire system.Figure 17. Awareness pose. BALANCED BREA THING ( Pranayama )
Time: 5 minutes
Repetitions: 1 set in the morning and 1 set in the evening
Breathing exercises in Ayurveda are a gentle form of balancing the breath
—moving from one nostril to the other—a technique called Pranayama. Its
purpose is to make the respiratory rhythm more regular , which in turn has a
soothing effect on the entire nervous system (that is why we call this a
“neuro-respiratory ” exercise at our Center). A few minutes of balanced
breathing, sittin g quietly with eyes closed, is very relaxing; many people
feel a pleasant lightness in the head afterward and a warm glow inside. Pranayama is the best prelude to meditation, since it effortlessly focuses
your attention inward and reduces the scattered thoughts and “noise” that
usually fill the mind. Modern medicine has discovere d that brain function is divided between
the right and left cerebral hemi spheres, each of which contributes its own
emphasis. Right-brain activity is intuitive and feeling; left-brain activity is
rational and organized. Using the technique of Pranayama, Ayurveda has
found a way to “talk” to both hemispheres and bring them into balance. When the breath becomes more balanced, several things happen: you switch
your breathing from the right to the left nostril at regular intervals, your
mind becomes more clear and alert, and one side of the body is not
noticeably weaker than the other .We recommend 5 minutes of Pranayama morning and evening every day
as part of the ideal Ayurvedic daily routine. A few pointers before you start:
Any form of straining must be avoided—if you begin to feel dizzy or
start to pant, stop for a moment and sit quietly with your eyes closed
until you feel normal again. Do not snort in order to clear a clogged
nostril. It is not advised to use antihistamines to open your nose before
starting. If aller gies or a cold have blocked your sinuses, just skip
Pranayama until they clear up naturally . It is normal for the mucous membranes to contract when you first learn
to do this exercise. Just let them relax. Within a few days, they will
adjust normally to the new routine. Perform Pranayama in a quiet room without radio, music, or TV. Keep
your eyes closed. If you feel anxious at any time, stop the exercise for
a minute, but do not get up immediately . Sit quietly with your eyes
closed until you feel relaxed again. If the uncomfortable sensation
persists, lie down for a few minutes until it passes. Never hold your breath or count how many seconds you inhale and
exhale. These instructions are sometimes seen in yoga books or are
given out by yoga teachers. All such practices run contrary to the
purpose of this exercise, which is to allow the body to balance the
breath itself. Your natural breathing rhythm is right for you. HOW TO PERFORM BALANCED BREA THING (Pranayama)
Find a comfortable chair that allows you to sit upright with your spine
straight and both feet on the floor—it is best not to lounge back ward while
doing Pranayama. Close your eyes, let your mind rest, and place your righthand in the illustrated position—your thumb goes beside your right nostril,
your two middle fingers beside your left nostril. To perform the exercise, gently close one nostril, then the other , as you
breathe normally . To keep your arm from getting tired, it helps to tuck your
right elbow in close to your ribs, but don’t prop it up on your chair or on a
table. The basic rhythm of Pranayama is:
Gently close the right nostril with your thumb and slowly exhale
through your left nostril. Inhale easily through your left nostril. Close the left nostril with the two middle fingers and exhale out of the
right nostril. Inhale easily through the right nostril. In Pranayama, the hand changes positions with each exhalation of
breath.In Pranayama, the hand changes positions with each exhalation of
breath. Alternate nostrils for 5 minutes. Then lower your arm and sit back
comfortably with eyes closed for 1 or 2 minutes. You can proceed
immediately to meditation if that is your next activity . Note that you begin each breath on the exhale and finish on the inhale—
this is different from most Western breathing exercises, which begin by
taking in a deep breath. In Pranayama, you do not need to take deep breaths. Just let your breathing come naturally but a little slower and deeper than
usual. If at any time you feel like breathing through your mouth, go ahead,
then return to the exercise as soon as you feel comfortable again. For many
people the pattern of breathing changes at times; this is normal and a good
sign that you are reaching a more balanced style of respiration. OceanofPDF .comCHAPTER 14
SEASONAL ROUTINE— BALANCING THE WHOLE YEAR
One of the lesso ns of the quant um mechanical body is that a person does
not stop at the boundary of his skin. His existence continues outward
throughout nature. Vata, Pitta, and Kapha are at play everywher e around us,
linking our physiologies to the world at large. That is why your body
changes with the weather , sensi ng rain in its bones or growing lazy during
the first awakening days of spring. Your doshas are keeping a weather
watch for heat, cold, wind, humidity , and all the other variations that the
seasons bring. When a cold, dry wind begins to blow , the Vata inside you responds,
because it too is cold, dry, and moving. It senses that someth ing akin to
itself has begun to dominate the scene. Each dosha recognizes a particular
kind of weather that brings it out, according to the principle of “like speaks
to like.”
Cold, dry weather , along with wind, accumulates Vata. Hot weather
accumulates Pitta, more so if it is also humid. Cold, wet weather or snow
accumulates Kapha. The word accumulate means that a dosha is increasing in response to
surrounding influences; if it increases too much, the accumulation goes on
to aggravation, a serious stage of imbalance. The reason a dosha can affect
you out of seaso n, as when you get a cold in summer , is that there is a delay ,
or a spillover effect. It takes time for a dosha to accumulate to the point
where it begins to disrupt your body’ s functioning. The first weeks of
autumn may seem perfectly comfortable until you suddenly notice some
anxiety or a twinge in your joints, signs of Vata aggravation.The principle at work here is the same as with a morning hangover: It
takes a while for your body to process a mistake and spit it out in the form
of a symptom. Vata moves the quickest, so its imbalances tend to show up
fastest, followed by Pitta, which might take a month before causing visible
trouble, and finally Kapha, which typically remains “stuck ” like cold
molasses all winter , only to “melt down” and flow in the spring (having a
runny nose and sinus problems in April or May indicates that you needed to
take better care of Kapha in February). DOSHAS AND THEIR SEASONS
As with the rhythms of the day, there are master cycles matched to the
doshas that run throughout the year. Our bodies automatically flow with
these changes as long as we do not interfere. Ayurveda divides the year into
three seasons in place of the usual four . Kapha season falls in spring—mid-Mar ch to mid-June. Pitta season falls in summer and early autumn—mid-June to mid-October . Vata season bridges late autumn and winter—mid-October to mid-Mar ch. A complete yearly cycle takes us through Kapha, Pitta, and Vata, in that
order , mirroring the daily cycle. The calendar season that gets absorbed is
autumn, because it is divided between two doshas. Autumn is considered
Pitta as long as hot weather prevails and Vata as soon as it turns cold, dry,
and windy. Peop le who have a predominance of Vata will walk outside on a
crisp October day and feel that the weather is extremely conge nial to them
—perhaps too much so. The lively, exhilarating quality of fall is only a step
away from the fatigue and depression that some people feel at this time of
year. The Vata wind seems to fan their inner spark and then blow it out. So
one has to be attentive to balancing the whole year, particularly when your
body type approaches its vulnerable period. The three Ayurvedic seasons are only approximate and have to be
adjusted accordi ng to local conditions. In India, for example, there are sixseasons, in keeping with the arrival of the monsoon and other climatic
changes that we do not have in the continental United States. On the other
hand, many areas of Florida have practically year-round Pitta conditions,
giving way to a brief Vata or Kapha winter . It is not really the calendar but nature itself that tells us when the doshas
will be influenc ed. Any damp, cold, overcast day will cause an increase of
Kapha, whether it occurs in fall, winter , or spring. The doshas have the
keenest of weather eyes. Even in Florida, they adapt to the minor shifts that
prevail in the climate, enabling one to experience a comple te cycle of
Kapha, Pitta, and Vata during the year . FOLLOWING A SEASONAL ROUTINE
Traditionally , Ayurveda advises that everyone should follow a seasonal
routine (ritucharya ) to preserve balance as the seasons change. This routine
does not involve major alterations in your lifestyle, only a shift of emphasis. You should always maintain your Ayurvedic daily routine—that remains of
primary importa nce—and continue to follow the diet that pacifies your
major dosha (or the one speci fied by a Ayurvedic doctor), with certain
variations to blend into the season. KAPHA SEASON (Spring and Early Summer)
Favor a diet that is lighter , drier, and less oily than during other seasons. Heavy dairy products (cheese, yogurt, and ice cream) should be reduced,
since they especially tend to aggravate Kapha. Favor warm food and drink. Eat more foods with pungent, bitter, and astringent tastes and fewer with
sweet, sour , and salty tastes. PITT A SEASON (Midsummer Through Early Autumn)Agni is naturally low during hot weather , so you may find that your
appetite decreas es in summer . Respect this change by not overe ating. Favor
cool food and drink, but not ice cold. Your body will want more liquids in
hot weather , but it is important not to douse the digestive fire by drinking
cold liquids after a meal. Favor sweet, bitter , and astringent tastes and
reduce sour , salty , and pungent ones. VATA SEASON (Late Autumn Through Winter)
Favor warm food and drink, heavier food, and a more oily diet than you
do durin g the rest of the year. Make sure your food is well cooked and easy
to diges t, accompanied by plenty of warm liquids (hot water or Vata tea is
best). Eat more of the sweet, sour, and salty tastes and less of the bitter ,
astringent, and pungent. Avoid dry or uncooked foods (especially salads and
raw fruits and vegetables). Don’ t worry if your appetite increase s—this is a
natural tendency in winter and helps pacify Vata dosha; however , be sure
not to eat more than you can comfortably digest. Two other general points apply:
Eat fresh produce at all times of year , preferably those that are grown
locally . Avoid foods that are not locally in season—for example, fewer
tomatoes or lettuce in winter , fewer grains in summer , no fruits
shipped half-ripened from other locales, and so on. As you can see, the seasonal routine involves mostly the commonsense
adjustments in eating habits that we already follow . But look around a
restaurant on a frigid February day and notice how many diners still order
chilled salads and ice cream; not knowing any better , almost everyone will
be drinking ice water , beer, or cold white wine—all of which are
aggravating to Vata during its most prominent season.In general, the season to be most vigilant about is the one your body type
matches—summer for Pittas, winter for Vatas, spring for Kaphas. These are
times when you want to be especially faithful to your body-ty pe regimen. Also, at the turn of every season Vata dosha tends to become more
vulnerable, so it is good to be careful about Vata when winter turns to
spring, spring to summer , and so on, because this is typically when seasonal
colds and flu strike. If you have two doshas prominent in your prakruti, as most people do,
you can balance each one as its season comes around. Let’s give a practical
example. If you are a Vata-Pitta, you would follow a Vata-pacifying diet in
late fall and early winter (Vata season) and a Pitta-pacifying diet in summer
(Pitta season). The only season left is Kapha, which falls in spring. Here
you would blend the Vata diet, which matches your primary dosha, with a
Kapha diet, which is naturally suited to the season. To blend two diets
means to take half your food from the “favor” column of the Vata diet and
half from the “favor” column of the Kapha diet. Life becomes too complicated if you make an obsession out of changing
your diet to suit the weather . The Ayurvedic seasonal routine should be just
another way to encourage your body’ s own natural instincts to emer ge. OceanofPDF .comEpilogue
FLOWERS IN A QUANTUM FIELD
Most people assume without question that their bodies had a definite beginning and are moving
inexorably toward a definite end. Each of us began life as a single cell in the womb and will end as
“dust unto dust.” However , these are cultural beliefs, not absolute facts. The human body has no
definite beginning or end. It is constantly creating itself, again and again, every day. This means that
every minute is a kind of genesis and at the same time an ending in which we give up a bit of dust
unto dust. If we are creating ourselves all the time, then it is never too late to begin creating the
bodies we want instead of the ones we mistakenly assume we are stuck with. Every breath you take is a creative act. The molecules in the air are random and chaotic. If they
happen to enter your body , they magically acquire a purpose and an identity . Could any act be more
creative? Consider what happens to a single oxygen atom as you breathe it in. Within a few
thousandths of a second it passes through the moist, nearly transparent membranes of the lungs. It
immediately attaches itself to the hemoglobin inside one of your red blood cells. In an instant, a
remarkable transformation occurs. The blood cell changes color , from the dark blue-b lack of oxygen-
starved hemoglobin to the bright red of oxygen-rich hemoglobin, and a stray atom of air suddenly
becomes you. It has crossed the invisible boundary dividing the lifeless from the living. In another sixty seconds the same oxygen atom will make a complete circuit of your body via the
bloodstream (the journey takes only fifteen seconds if you are exercising vigorously). In that time,
about half of the body’ s new oxygen will exit the blood to turn into a kidney cell, a biceps muscle, a
neuron, or any other tissue. The atom will reside in that tissue anywhere from a few minutes to a
year, perfo rming as many functions as you are capable of. An oxygen atom might become part of a
happy thought by linking into a neurotransmitter . Or it might instead send a shiver of fear through
you by joining a molecule of adrenaline. It could feed a brain cell with glucose or sacrifice itself on
the battle line by becoming part of a white cell sent to attack invading bacteria. This is how the river of life—the river of the body—moves along, with utmost fluidity ,
intelligence, and creativity . Now that we have surveyed the principles of Ayurveda, it becomes clear
that our responsibility to ourselves is also creative. We are placed here in this world to manage a
project that is equivalent to building a new universe every day. Creating yourself is not just a full-
time job, it is a staggering one. With every single breath, you expose 5 trillion red blood corpuscles to
the air. Each corpuscl e contains 280 millio n molecules of hemoglobin. Each molecule of hemoglobin
can pick up and transport 8 atoms of oxygen. If you think of each oxygen atom as a new building block, then with a single breath you are adding
11 × 1021 (or 11,000,000,000,000,000,000,000) new “bricks” that will be delivered to various sites
around your body . They will all fit inside you with exact precision, and not a single new brick willdisrupt the position of an old one. The old gives way to the new as smoothly and effortlessly as a
river runs. The only reason we are all not perfectly healthy today is that we are constantly taking these infinite
new bricks and putting them into the same old slots. Why do we do that? Ultimately it is a matter of
awareness, of how we see ourselves. If you look closely at your own life, you will realize that you are
sending signals to your body that repeat the same old beliefs, the same old fears and wishes, the same
old habits of yesterday and the day before. That is why you are stuck with the same old body . HANDLING LIFE AS A WHOLE
The new bricks that enter your body do not just fall into place; they are positioned by a bit of inner
intelligence that knows how to build your heart, kidneys, skin, enzymes, hormones, DNA, and
everything else. This intelligence is literally infinite, and all of it is under our control. Yet, for the
most part, we take the boundless creativity of the quantum field and bombard it with narrow beams
of attention. Any thought you have is just a beam of focused attention sent out from your quantum
self. It takes only a few of these narrow beams, or thoughts, to make life a little longer or a little
better . You can add five years to your life, on the average, by deciding to quit smoking . You can add a
few more years by losing excess weight or eating good food or taking regular exercise. But these
narrow beams of focused attention are limited. They will not make you perfectly healthy . They will
not extend your life by two times or ten times, if that is even possible, or improve the quality of life
by that much. It takes breakthrough thinking to do that, as we noted when we began. How can you activate the
full potential of your quantum mechanical body? The answer is surprisingly simple. The gigantically
complex project of creating yourself can be broken down into just a few processes that come under
your control every day:
Eating . Eating is the creative act that selects the raw matter of the
world that will be turned into you. To make sure that this process
proceeds correctly , you need only to know your body type and follow
the diet that matches it. Look back at the section on your body-type
diet; let the information sink in by rereading it until you have absorbed
the guiding principles. Now eat according to those principles, easily
and comfortably . Digestion and assimilation. Digestion and assimilation are the creative
acts that turn the “bricks” of matter into living tissue. Your body’ s
digestive fire, its agni, handles both of these processes, coordinating
them perfectly . Look back again at the section on agni, learn how yourparticular kind functions, and then respect your digestive fire by
resetting it regularly . Elimination . Elimination is the creative act that purifies the body ,
excreting undigested food and ridding the cells of toxins and other “old
bricks.” You can improve elimination by being regular in your daily
routine and also by taking advantage of Ayurvedic purification
therapies. Under the section on agni we talk about purifying herbs; a
sattvic diet is also a great help, since it reduces to an absolute
minimum the intake of impurities. If you can, incorporate seasonal
panchakarma into your annual routine, preferably three times a year or
at least once. This is the most powerful therapy for aiding elimination. Breathing . As the basic rhythm of life that supports all other rhythms,
breathing could be called the most creative act we perform with the
body . Correct breathing tunes our cells to the rhythms of nature, and
the more natural and refined our breathing, the more in tune we
become. Many Ayurvedic routines help to bring breathing back into
balance—all forms of the three-dosha exercises are good, as well as
the gentle Pranayama, or balanced breathing, that you can do for a few
minutes every day . Finally , we can gather all these separate processes under one heading:
Living in tune with your quantum mechanical body . This is the total creative act of life. If you live
in tune with your quantum mechanical body , all of your daily activities will proceed as smoothly as
the parts—breathing, eating, digestion, assimilation, and elimination. The most impo rtant routine to
follow here is transcending, the act of getting in touch with the quantum level of yourself. Review the
section on meditation and incorporate a few minutes of quieting your mind into your schedule every
morning and evening. According to Ayurveda, this is the way to boost ordinary existence to a higher plane. If we handle
a few processes correctly , then the body’ s own tendency to remain in balance will take care of the
rest. At the quantum level, we are all master builders; it is necessary only to follow the guiding
intelligence of our nature—our prakruti—and the vast complexity of the body will run as perfectly as
the seasons, the tides, and the stars that surround us. RIPPLES IN THE OCEAN OF CONSCIOUSNESSAt its heart, the “science of life” is a very personal and reassuring kind of knowledge. It returns
you to yourself. Now we are ready to send you out on your own to live the knowle dge. When you
opened this book and read the phrase perfect health , you may have been a bit shocked. Every person
expects to be sick at some time in his life; to expect otherwise seems almost illegal. Yet the
Ayurvedic sages looked at life through different eyes. A famous Vedic verse says, “It is our duty to
the rest of mankind to be perfectly healthy , because we are ripples in the ocean of consciousness, and
when we are sick, even a little, we disrupt cosmic harmony .”
Now you understand the basis for this extraordinary saying. It is not correct to see yourself as an
isolated organism in time and space, occupying six cubic feet of volume and lasting seven or eight
decades. Rather , you are one cell in the cosmic body , entitled to all the privileges of your cosmic
status, including perfect health. Nature made us thinkers so that we could realize this truth. As
another Vedic verse declares, “The inner intelligence of the body is the ultimate and supreme genius
in nature. It mirrors the wisdom of the cosmos.” This genius is inside you, a part of your inner
blueprint that cannot be erased. At the quantum mechanical level, there is no sharp boundary dividing you from the rest of the
universe. Each of us is balanced between the infinite and the infinitesimal. The same protons found in
the hearts of stars, which have lived at least 5 billion years, take up residence inside us. The neutrinos
that streak through the earth in a few millionths of a second are part of us for a brief instant, too. You
are a flowing river of atoms and molecules collected from every corner of the cosm os. You are an
outcropping of energy whose waves exten d to the edges of the unified field. You are a reservoir of
intelligence that cannot be exhausted, because nature as a whole is inexhaustible. Ayurveda has come on the scene at a ripe moment, when “the reenchantment of nature” is taking
place at the cutting edge of physics. The idea that the universe is a living, breathing, thinking
organism, which would have been ridicule d a generation ago, may prove to be the first principle of a
new science. If so, Ayurveda will quickly rise to prominence as the quantum medicine of our time. For modern man, disease is not a necessity but a choice— nature did not impose a bacterium or
virus that causes heart attacks, diabetes, cancer , arthritis, or osteoporosis. These are largely man’ s
dubious creations. But what man has built he can also unbuild. If this book has helped to put your
mind on the journey of self-knowledge, you will never again see yourself as trapped by the same old
boundaries. If the body, stubborn and solid-looking as it appears, can also undertake this journey ,
something much greater will be achieved. We will no longer just dream of freedom from the ills that
flesh is heir to, we will really become free, clothed in flesh that has become as perfect as our ideals. OceanofPDF .comAppendix A
SOURCES FOR AYUR VEDA
You do not need special supplies or expert advice to balance your doshas
and live in accord with Ayurvedic principles. However , there are times in
most people’ s lives when they can use an extra boost to help reestablish
optimal health. Specialized foods, spices, and herbs have served an
important role in Ayurveda for thousands of years. Many of these traditional
products are now available in the West. Foods : Any wholesom e food raised naturally and free of additives is
Ayurvedic, but there are also a few specialty foods that make a pleasing
addition to the diet:
Rose petal jam is super b for pacifying Pitta and is also considered
extremely Sattvic, or pure. Sweetened almond butter is traditionally considered excellent for vitality
and mental alertness. If you do not want to take the time to make your own ghee (clarified
butter) , commercially made varieties are available. Herbs and food supplements : It is convenient to buy tea bags of specially
prepared Vata-, Pitta-, or Kapha-pacifying herb teas, to be alternated with
changes in the season. Spice mixtures called churnas are also a
convenience, since they can be sprinkled over your food at the table to give
a Vata-, Pitta-, or Kapha-pacifying effect. More complex, and not duplicable
at home , are the traditional rasayanas (herbal food supplements), which
often involve dozens of separate preparations and various exotic
ingredients.Aromatic and massage oils: These specially prepared oils are used for
abhyanga and aromatherapy and are designed to balance the appropriate
dosha. Miscellaneous : Specia l raw silk gloves used for garshana (dry massage)
and silver tongue-scrapers are useful additions to support an ideal daily
routine. Many of these products, foods, or supplements may be availab le at your
local health food store or Indian grocery . Visit the Chopra Center for Well Being . Some of the specialized therap ies
described in this book require supervision by a physician trained in
Ayurveda. These include panchakarma , the seasonal purification routine,
and marma therapy . Courses to enhance wellness and to support individuals
facing illness are available year round at the Chopra Center for Well Being
in beaut iful Carlsbad, Californi a. To learn more about the programs and
services offered at the Center , call (888) 424-6772 or visit our website at
www .chopra.com . Courses in Meditation, Ayurveda, and Mind Body Medicine. We have
certified hundre ds of instructors throughout the world to offer programs
developed at the Chopra Center for Well Being. For information on any of the following courses, call the Chopra Center
at (888) 424-6772 or visit our website at www .chopra.com . Primor dial Sound Meditation. Learn an effective mantra meditation
technique to quiet your mind, reduce stress, and tap into your reservoir of
energy and creativity . Creating Health . Learn how to apply the principles of Ayurveda to make
your daily life happier and healthier . Magical Beginnings, Enchanted Lives. This course for expectant parents
teaches the essential tools for a conscious pregnancy and delivery .Return to Wholeness. This program guides people facing cancer to their
inner place of healing. OceanofPDF .comAppendix B
GLOSSAR Y
abhyanga— daily oil massage
agni— digestive fire
ama— residual impurit ies deposited in the body as a result of improper
digestion. Also mental ama, toxic emotions or negative thoughts as a result
of incompletely metabolized emotional experiences
ananda— bliss, synonymous with “pure joy”
asana— a yoga pose
dhatu— one of the body’ s seven basic constituents, synonymous with
“tissue” in Western medicine
dinacharya— the Ayurvedic daily routine
dosha— one of the three basic metabolic principles connecting the mind and
body
ghee— clarified butter
guna— any fundamental natural quality (e.g., dry, moist, hot, cold, etc.). Also applied to sattva , rajas, and tamas— the “three gunas”
Kapha— the dosha responsible for bodily structure
marma— the junction point between consciousness and matter (107 marmas
on the skin are accessible through the sense of touch)ojas— the purest expression of metabolism; the final end product of correct
digestion and assimilation of food
panchakarma— purification treatments (literally , “the five actions”)
Pitta— the dosha responsible for metabolism
pragya aparadh— the mistake of the intellect (i.e., identifying with the part
and losing the whole)
prakruti— nature, referring to one’ s mind body constitution
Pranayama— Ayurvedic respiratory exercises
rajas— the innate impulse to act
rasa— of the six tastes; also, the first tissue layer (dhatu)
rasayana— Ayurvedic rejuvenative herbal formula
Rishi— a Vedic seer
ritucharya— the Ayurvedic seasonal routine
sattva— purity; the innate impulse to evolve
Surya Namaskar— the “Sun Salute,” a twelve-part Ayurvedic physical
exercise
tamas— inertia; the innate impulse to remain the same
Vata— the dosha responsible for all movement in the body
Veda— literally “science” or “knowledge.” Ayurveda (“the science of life”
or “knowledge of lifespan”) is an of fshoot of Veda. vipak— the post-digestive ef fect of food on the bodyyoga— Vedic knowledg e for attaining union with the domain of pure
consciousness. The branch of yoga involving physical exercise is known as
Hatha yoga . OceanofPDF .comBibliography
The following is a selected bibliography that offers insights into some of the ideas expressed in this
book. Chopra, Deepak. Creating Health. Boston: Houghton Mif flin Company , 1987. ———. Quantum Healing: Exploring the Frontiers of Mind/Body Medicine. New York: Bantam
Books, 1989. ———. Ageless Body , Timeless Mind. New York: Harmony Books, 1993. Dash, Bhagwan. Fundamentals of Ayurvedic Medicine. Delhi, India: Bansal & Company , 1978. Frawley , David. Ayurvedic Healing—A Compr ehensive Guide. Salt Lake City, UT: Passage Press,
1989. Lad, Vasant. Ayurveda—The Science of Self-Healing. Santa Fe, NM: Lotus Press, 1984. Ranade, Subash. Natural Healing Thr ough Ayurveda. Salt Lake City , UT: Passage Press, 1993. Simon, David. The W isdom of Healing. New York: Harmony Books, 1997. ———. Vital Ener gy. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2000. Simon, David, and Deepak Chopra. The Chopr a Center Herbal Guide: Natural Prescriptions for
Perfect Health. New York: Three Rivers Press, 2000. Svoboda, Robert. Ayurveda—Life, Health and Longevity . London: Arkana Penguin Books, 1992. OceanofPDF .comAlso by Deepak Chopra
OceanofPDF .comCopyright © 1991, 2000 by Deepak Chopra, M.D. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any
means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage
and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher . Published by Three Rivers Press, New York, New York
Member of the Crown Publishing Group. | Perfect_Health_-_The_Complete_Mind_Body_Guide_by_Deepak_Chopra.txt | Summarize the following text section accurately and concisely. Maintain specific details and numerical information, and use anti-repetition mechanisms:
Going the extra mile at any age is just another way of
inviting serious Vata problems. (Recent studies in sports medicine indicate
that 50 percent of serious women athletes have significant menstrual
disturbances, a symptom of highly aggravated Vata. )BODY -TYPE EXERCISE
Every time you move your body, you are talking to your doshas. Because
each dosha has its own emphasis, there are three kinds of benefits that all
balanced exercise brings:
Vata: poise, agility, limberness, coor dination, and inner exhilaration
Pitta: warming up the body, circulation of blood to all parts, increased
heart capacity
Kapha: increased strength and stability, steady ener gy
If you never get out of your armchair to exercise, obviously you will not
experience these benefits. But many active people with firm muscles and
sound hearts do not experience them either. Most exercise programs today
are dedicated to increasing the capacity of the cardiovascular system, which
puts a heavy emphasis on Pitta dosha. I would like to list balanced activities
that are broader in scope and more suited to the major body types. VATA-TYPE EXERCISE
Vata types have bursts of energy but tire quickly. They excel at balancing
and stretching exercises. Being light and lithe, they like yoga and walking,
as long as these do not beco me too tiring. Because of their natural
enthusiasm, Vata types also feel good doing bouncy dance aerobics to
music. Any exercise that takes place indoors is good in winter, since Vatapeople are averse to the cold and do not have enough fat and muscle to
protect them from the elements. Everyone dominated by Vata must always be careful not to get carried
away and push themselves too far. This is the primary caution for them,
since Vata dosha typically starts with a bang but does not know its limits,
particularly when out of balance. Half an hour of mild exercise a day is
enough. If you are exhausted, trembling, dizzy, or on the verge of cramping,
you have gone much too far. These are all signs of Vata imbalance. PITT A-TYPE EXERCISE
Pitta types tend to have more drive than endurance. They are good at all
exercise in moderation. Because they like a challenge above all, Pittas enjoy
skiing, hiking, mountain climbing, and other sports that bring a sense of
accomplishment at the end of the day. Athletes in competitive sports must have a good deal of Pitta to give
them a fighting spirit, but this is not the dosha for intense competition. Pittas hate to lose; this motivates them more than the satisfaction of
winning. (Sports studies have shown this among professional tennis players,
some of whom are notorious for Pitta-type anger. ) Pittas will grimly make
themselves run, jog, or weight train but gain very little inner contentment
from their ef forts. Probably you already know whether you are falling into this trap. If you
stew over every bad shot on the golf course or want to drill your tennis
opponent with the ball, give up these sports. If you chew yourself or anyone
else out in any sport, walk away from it. Anyone who needs to killsomebody on the court is suffering from gross Pitta imbalanc e. Also, the
start-stop rhythm of competition sports is not as good for your body as half
an hour of continuous motion. Walking briskly for half an hour a day will take the feistiness out of your
system better than a competitive sport. Swimming is even better—many Pitta types who drive themselves on the
job find that a plunge in the pool at five o’clock cools them off and
dissolves the day’s tensions. Winter sports of all kinds also appeal to Pittas
because they take to the cold better than Vata and Kapha types. Because
they are stimulated visually, Pittas gain a large benefit from a leisurely stroll
in the woods; it provides a change from their usual determined pace. The
beauty of nature will sink deep into them when they pause long enough to
experience it. KAPHA-TYPE EXERCISE
Kapha types have strong, steady energy but often lack agility. They
generally are good at all exerc ises and become better when they become
more limber and balanced. Because of their physical strength, Kaphas excel
at endurance sports—they have the natural build for a long run or distance
rowing. The combination of Pitta and Kapha gives determination and
endurance. This is a common prakruti among professional baseball and
football players. Pushing the blood through their veins feels good to Kaphas, which is why
they take to weight training in gyms and health clubs. It is good to combine
this with exercis e that gets the circulation going; bringing up a good sweat
(without exhaus tion) will clear out Kapha congestion. Many Kaphas have
excess fat and water that need to be pushed out. Being a cold dosha, Kapha
resents it if you go out into the cold and damp to run or row. In winter,
Kapha types should stay indoors and stick with aerobics or calisthenics. Dance classes provide a good alternative for Kaphas. Although a Kapha
may not have a dancer ’s build, they feel much better about their natural
shape, once they gain the poise and balance that dance training instills. A few general pr ecautions apply to all body types. Do not exercise:
Just befor e or after a meal. Exercising at these times lowers your agni,
which you want at its highest. Allow at least half an hour before a meal
and one to two hours afterward without exercising. Walking right after
a meal, however, is an exception. Taking a leisurely fifteen-minute
walk after lunch and/or dinner stimulates digestion (anything longer or
harder would compete with it). Exercising after sundown is
discouraged by Ayurveda; it is better to let your body slow down in the
evening and prepare itself for bed. In the wind or the cold. Both Vata and Kapha dosha resent the cold, as
we have mentioned. If you go out for a walk in winter, keep yourself
bundled up and do not breathe strenuously. Heavy breathing of cold,
damp air is bad for the respiratory tract. Also, any strong wind upsets
Vata dosha and removes the calming ef fect of a good walk. In the br oiling sun. The reason only mad dogs and English-men go out
in the noonday sun is that harsh sun inflames Pitta dosha, raising your
body heat at a time when exercise is raising it enough already. Along with moderation, the key to balanced exercise is regularity. The
doshas always tend to reinforce themselves. If you have neglec ted physical
activity for a while, your body will be used to inertia. Once you return to
even a little activity, your doshas will rise to a level of better balance andwant to stay there. So, do everything you can to start a progra m that you
will enjoy for years, preferably for life. THREE-DOSHA EXERCISES
Now I would like to describe the three-dosha exercises taught at our
Center: the Sun Salute, the set of gentle yoga positions, and balanced
breathing. More people in the West are becoming familiar with these
postures and discovering the benefits that have been appreciated in the East
for thousands of years. The following exercises are very easy to do. Only the Sun Salut e requires
some patience to master; the others do not take any special skill. The whole
emphasis on perfect performan ce is misplaced. These are exercises for
tuning in to your body. Anyone can do that, simply by letting the mind relax
into each pose. Don’ t even think of how you look or how close you are
coming to the ideal positions. Whatever you achieve is right for you. This
approach makes each exercise feel good as you do it and even better
afterward. Everyone feels pleas antly relaxed for the next few hours after
doing a short Ayurvedic routine. The following descriptions were provided by Bija Bennett, an expert,
talented yoga therapist who has taught yoga at many of our seminars over
the years. SUN SALUTE (Surya Namaskara)
Time: 1 to 2 minutes for each cycle, moving slowly
Repetitions: 1 to 6 cycles in the morning, mor e as you become experienced
The Sun Salute (Surya Namaskara) is a complete Ayurvedic exercise that
simultaneously integrates the whole physiology—mind, body, and breath. It
strengthens and stretches all the major muscle groups, lubricates the joints,conditions the spine, and mass ages the internal organs. Blood flow and
circulation is increased throughout the body. With regular practice, you will
gain stability, suppleness, flexibility, and grace. Here is a cycle of 12 postures. Perform them in a fluid sequence one right
after another. Synchronize each motion with the breath. Move smoothly
into each pose, breathing fully and easily so that each cycle takes about 1
minute. Start slowly, avoiding strain, and listen to your body as you gradually
increase the number of Sun Salute cycles you do. This step-by-step
progression eliminates the possibility of pulling or tiring your muscles,
especially if you haven’ t been exercising regularly. Stop when you notice
that you are breathing and perspiring heavily or feeling too tired. If this
occurs, lie down and rest for a minute or two until the breath is free. With
regular performance, your capacity will easily and naturally increase. In the Sun Salut e, a specific pattern of breathing is encouraged. Inhale to
extend your spine vertically or to open, lengthen, or fully elonga te the body. Exhale to bend or fold the body, creating a flexing of the spine. Each of
your movements should be an extension of the breath in order to facilitate
the motion. There is one transit ional position in the Sun Salut e where the
breath pauses for a moment before you continue into the next pose. Otherwise, let your breathing be fluid and continuous throughout the entire
exercise. HOW TO PERFORM THE SUN SALUTE
Perform the following postures in a flowing, moving sequence one right
after another. Remember to use the breath to connect each pose with the one
following it. Emphasize the expansion of the chest on inhale and the
contraction of the abdomen or belly in a bending motion on exhale. Salutation position ( Samasthiti ). Begin by standing tall with the feet
together in a parallel position. Stand evenly on both feet and lengthenthe spine upward. Place the palms of your hands together in front of
your chest. Lift the chest and expand the ribs as you look straight
ahead. Raised arm position ( Tadasana ). On the inhalation, slowly extend the
arms over the head. Lift and expand the chest as you continue
lengthening the spine while allowing the head to look upward. Keep
breathing evenly as you continue right into the next pose. Hand to foot position ( Uttanasana ). As you exhale, bend the body
forward and down, lengthening the spine, arms, and neck. Let the
knees soften or bend freely, bringing the hands to the floor. Avoid
collapsing the chest or overrounding the upper back. Keep the elbows
and shoulders relaxed, and don’ t lock the knees. Equestrian position ( Ashwa Sanchalanasana ). On your next
inhalation, extend the left leg back and drop the back knee to the
ground. The front knee is bent and the supporting foot remains flat on
the floor. Simultaneously extend or lift the spine and open the chest. Allow the head and neck to lengthen vertically. Figure 1. Salutation position. Figure 2. Raised arm position. Figure 3. Hand to foot position. Mountain position ( Adhomukha Svanasana ). On the exhalation,
bring the left leg back to meet the right leg—legs both at hip width
apart, hands at shoulder distance. As you raise the buttocks and hips,
press down with the hands, allowing the spine to release upward and
back. Stretch the heels down toward the floor and lengthen through the
backs of the legs. Relax and free the head and neck. The body forms an
even inverted V from the pelvis to the hands and from the pelvis to the
heels. Figure 4. Equestrian position. Eight limbs position ( Ashtanga Namaskara ). Gently drop both
knees to the ground and slowly slide the body down at an angle as you
bring the chest and chin to the ground. All eight limbs—both the toes,
knees, chest, hands, and chin—touch the floor. Hold this very briefly
and then continue to move into the next pose. Cobra position ( Bhujangasana ). On the inhalation, lift and expand
the chest forward and up as you press down with the hands. Keep the
elbows close to the body and continue to extend the spine upward. Open and widen the chest and move the shoulders down and away
from the ears to free the neck and head. Let the upper back widen and
lengthen. Do not initiate this movement with the head or lift the body
with the neck. Figure 5. Mountain position. Figure 6. Eight limbs position. Figure 7. Cobra position. | [
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"A": "Increasing the capacity of the cardiovascular system, which puts a heavy emphasis on Pitta dosha.",
"Q": "What is emphasized in most modern exercise programs?"
},
{
"A": "Pitta dosha",
"Q": "Which dosha is stimulated by hot weather?"
},
{
"A": "Not to get carried away and push themselves too far, as Vata dosha typically starts with a bang but does not know its limits, particularly when out of balance.",
"Q": "What is the primary caution for Vata types when exercising?"
},
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"A": "Half an hour of mild exercise a day",
"Q": "What is the recommended duration for Vata types' exercise?"
},
{
"A": "Regularity",
"Q": "What is the key to balanced exercise, according to Ayurveda?"
},
{
"A": "5 minutes in the morning and 5 minutes in the evening",
"Q": "What is the recommended duration for Pranayama breathing exercises?"
}
] |
Random House, Inc. New York, Toronto, London, Sydney , Auckland www .randomhouse.com
Three Rivers Press is a registered trademark and the Three Rivers Press colophon is a trademark of
Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Chopra, Deepak. Perfect health, revised: the complete mind body guide
by Deepak Chopra.—1st ed. 1. Medicine, Psychosomatic. 2. Mind and body . I. Title. RC49.C46 2000
615.5’3—dc21
00-032595
Revised Edition
www .randomhouse.com
eISBN: 978-0-307-42143-2
v3.0
OceanofPDF .com | Perfect_Health_-_The_Complete_Mind_Body_Guide_by_Deepak_Chopra.txt | Summarize the following text section accurately and concisely. Maintain specific details and numerical information, and use anti-repetition mechanisms:
Random House, Inc. New York, Toronto, London, Sydney, Auckland www. randomhouse. com
Three Rivers Press is a registered trademark and the Three Rivers Press colophon is a trademark of
Random House, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Chopra, Deepak. Perfect health, revised: the complete mind body guide
by Deepak Chopra. —1st ed. 1. Medicine, Psychosomatic. 2. Mind and body. I. Title. RC49. C46 2000
615. 5’3—dc21
00-032595
Revised Edition
www. | [
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"Q": "What is the name of the company that owns the trademark \"Three Rivers Press\"?"
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"A": "Deepak Chopra",
"Q": "Who is the author of the book \"Perfect health, revised\"?"
},
{
"A": "Medicine, psychosomatic and the relationship between the mind and body",
"Q": "What is the main subject matter of the book \"Perfect health, revised\"?"
},
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"A": "978-0-307-42143-2",
"Q": "What is the ISBN number of the e-book edition of \"Perfect health, revised\"?"
},
{
"A": "www.randomhouse.com",
"Q": "What is the name of the website that the publisher recommends for more information?"
}
] |
MILLIONS OF DOLLARS ARE SPENT ON DRUG-ADVERTISING - WHILE DRUG-FREE HEALING IS ALMOST UNKNOWN
EVEN SOCALLED ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE USUALLY PROMOTES DRUGS - HELP SPREAD KNOWLEDGE OF DRUG-FREE HEALINGREMARKABLE RECOVERIES
FROM
SEVERE HEALTH PROBLEMS
by Stanley S. BassN.D., D.C., Ph.C., Ph.D., D.O., D.Sc., D.D., Orthopathic & Natural Hygiene doctor
Information you can use to gain a complete understanding of
how the human body works in health and disease. DRUG-FREE NATURAL HEALING ---- Dr. Stanley S. Bass uses this booklet as
required reading for his patients - to give an introduction to drug-free natural healing. What do you know about drug-free healing? Is it possible to reverse cancer through diet alone? What recovery method requires bed-rest and is popular in USA? What recovery method allows you to work and is used in Europe? Do you know a simple, effective way to improve intelligence? How is heart disease, ulcers, epilepsy, asthma easily reversed? What is the secret of multiple sclerosis recovery? Contents:INTRODUCTION by Stanley S. Bass page 2
THERAPEUTIC PROPERTIES OF RAW FOOD by Arnold DeVries page 2
WHAT SYMPTOMS TO EXPECT WHEN YOU IMPROVE YOUR DIET (original version) by Stanley S.
Bass page 9
A MOST INTERESTING CASE OF RECOVERY FROM CANCER - ON ONE MEAL A DAY ON A
RAW FOOD REGIMEN by Wong Hon Sun page 12
For personal assistance by telephone consultation for a successful management of all the steps of the
entire process of recovery, call Dr. Stanley S. Bass, N.D., D.C., Ph.D. at (718) 648-1500
Download this and other free booklets about drug-free natural healing at Dr. Bass website www.drbass.com
copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 2REMARKABLE RECOVERIES FROM SEVERE
HEALTH PROBLEMS THROUGH
DETOXICATION, JUICE PROGRAMS AND RAW FOOD
INTRODUCTION
It is with great anticipation and hope that I have gathered together, from more than 40 years of experience, a collection of
some of the most remarkable and inspiring cases of recoveries from a large group of diseases, many of which were
classified as “incurable”. These people, through the use of raw juice programs, have either completely restored their health
or greatly improved. While in America, water fasting has been popular, in Europe the use of raw vegetable juices has been preferred and used
in many large medically supervised institutions, While water-fasting requires mostly bed rest, the use of juices allows one to
continue working, since the use of juices provides some nutrition interspersed with detoxication, the removal of toxic
materials from the body and the simultaneous replacement of minerals, vitamins, enzymes, a limited amount of
carbohydrates, proteins, fats, etc. There is sufficient energy present in most cases and frequently more, since the body is spared from the use of enormous
amounts of energy required by the digestive processes. This liberated energy is immediately directed by the body into the
healing processes, thus allowing great changes to occur in a limited period of time - months and even years of regeneration
will manifest in just weeks of time. And all this can be done at home, with a minimum of expense, so that healing is possible
for all who have the will to undertake the process. There is nothing more inspiring than to look into a mirror every day and to see more youthful changes occurring along with
better feelings, so that each day brings more hope and encouragement to continue on till the goal of daily living is reached. Yet, at the same time, the appetite can be reasonably content with the taste of delicious and refreshing juices, taken
periodically several times during the day and carried in a thermos wherever you go. After just 2 or more weeks, other foods such as easily digested proteins and fats may be introduced into the diet, allowing
the rebuilding and recasting of the body to proceed after the initial cleansing period has prepared the proper foundation for
the reception of higher quality and more vital food materials. Usually, within a few weeks, people feel much better and in 4 months time, the body becomes stabilized and feels
consistently well. And within a period of less than one year, almost all health problems will have disappeared - even large
tumors and growths. Without further ado, I would like to begin with a presentation of some amazing cases of recoveries from all types of
illnesses and diseases, collected from some internationally famous institutions under the direction of well-known medical
doctors who, by using natural foods and methods alone, were able to successfully cure diseases which today cannot be
duplicated, even in the largest hospitals using the most modern medical methods. Dr. Stanley S. Bass
New York , April 2003
The following pages are from “The Elixir of Life” by Arnold DeVries, by whom I have kindly been given
permission to reproduce, based upon extensive research from 81 sources over a period of many years. THERAPEUTIC PROPERTIES OF RAW FOOD
by Arnold DeVries
SCIENTIFIC CLINICAL WORK
Individual raw food histories are important, but even more so is the applied clinical work in the field of science. Here also we
find strong evidence of the value of raw foods. In America this was noted as early as August of 1907, when an
announcement was made by the New York Post Graduate Hospital that a cure for long-standing and obstinate cases of
consumption was found in certain raw foods. Under the supervision of Dr. John F Russell, eleven patients were given four
ounces of raw vegetable juices each day in addition to their regular meals. The juices were extracted from such vegetables
as potato, rhubarb, summer squash, beet, turnip, cabbage, celery, carrot, parsnip, radishes, string-beans, and peas. Later
fifty additional patients were placed on the same dietary regime. Within seven months the eleven patients were discharged
copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 3as fit subjects for a life insurance risk, and the fifty patients who started later were described as well on the road to
recovery. TUBERCULOSIS
At a later period, in California, raw vegetable juices were again used in the treatment of tuberculosis. In this instance, Dr. H.
E. Kirshner was placed in charge of 200 tuberculosis patients for the county of Los Angeles at the Olive View Sanatorium. Some of the patients had spent as long as nine years on their backs with very little progress towards recovery. The diet was
composed largely of spaghetti, macaroni, and other cooked foods. Dr. Kirshner added a glass of "green drink’ consisting of
the raw juices of alfalfa, spinach, and parsley, to the diet of each of these patients every day. Results were highly favorable,
and the course of the patients was changed to recovery. Some of the patients who had been considered hopeless were
able to get out of bed in six to eight months. In Dr. Kirshner’s private practice, raw carrot juice, addition to the green juice
mixture, was included in the diet of tubercular patients, which brought about more rapid recovery than did the green juice
alone. HEART DISEASE, ARTHRITIS, LEUKEMIA
Dr. Kirshner has also reported that other chronic ailments can be treated very successfully with raw vegetable juices, taken
in some cases in amounts exceeding two quarts per day. He has cited recoveries from heart disease, prostrate gland
disease, cancer, neuritis, arthritis, and hemorrhoids through the use of raw juices. In one diabetic case, remarkable
improvement was noted within the first 21 days of treatment, and the insulin dosage was reduced from 15 to 5 units per
day. The most remarkable case history cited by Dr. Kirshner, however, was that of a severe case of splenic leukemia. The
patient in this instance was given raw carrot juice — small quantities at first, with gradual increases to very large quantities
— and her weight increased from 65 to 135 lbs. Recovery was complete within 18 months, and at no later time was there
any recurrence of the disease. CANCER
The famous cancer specialist, Dr. Max Gerson, has employed a diet containing large amounts of raw vegetable juices as
part of his treatment for cancer. Some of Dr. Gerson’s patients are given as much as 16 glasses of raw juice each day, but
most of them are given somewhat smaller amounts, including daily doses of 4 glasses of carrot and apple juice, 4 glasses
of green leaf juice, 2 to 3 glasses of calf’s liver juice and 1 glass of orange juice. About 75 per cent of Dr. Gerson’s cancer
diet, including all juices, is uncooked; the balance consists of vegetable broths and other foods which are cooked by the
least destructive methods. Dr. Gerson has reported gratifying results in about 50 per cent of his cancer cases, with many
complete recoveries. Indeed, Dr. Gerson’s experience in treating cancer at the Gotham Hospital in New York was so
successful that he was called upon to testify before a subcommittee in the U. S. Senate in 1946. In Canada, Dr. Gerson’s
counterpart may be found in the person of Dr. J. R. Davidson, formerly of the University of Toronto, who has also reported
curing a number of cancer patients on diets which consisted of raw foods and foods subjected to a minimum of cooking. Among other foods, Dr. Davidson prescribes rare meats , raw milk, raw vegetables, and raw vegetable juices made from
carrots, celery, and lettuce. RAW JUICES
In Great Britain, physicians have been equally successful in utilizing freshly-extracted raw juices for therapeutic purposes. The Ministry of Health and Public Health Service Laboratory has issued a report pointing out the value of using the juices of
cabbage, kale, parsley, and other uncooked vegetables in the treatment of a wide variety of diseased conditions. The report
states: "Juices are valuable in relief of hypertension, cardiovascular and kidney diseases and obesity. Good results have
also been obtained in rheumatic, degenerative and toxic states. Juices have an all-around protective action. Good results
can be obtained in treatment of peptic ulceration, also in treatment of chronic diarrhea, colitis and toxemia of gastro and
intestinal origin." The dental scientist, Dr. Harold F Hawkins, has reported that correct dietary control, with at least half of all foods used in
their raw state, is of much value in treating the symptoms of pyorrhea, including infection of the alveolar bone which
supports the teeth and gums. According to Dr. Hawkins, in caring for the pyorrhea patient, it is "essential to work out a plan
of eating that will include food that can be eaten raw such as raw milk, raw eggs, oysters on the half shell, raw vegetable
salads and raw fruit." Dr. Hawkins states that when an adequate dietary is followed, "the gum tone usually shows a definite
improvement in 60 or 90 days, and the X-rays show an improvement in bone density in about a year.”
During the years 1929, 1930, and 1931, Dr. Milton T. Hanke , working through the facilities provided by the University of
Chicago and the Chicago Dental Research Club, studied hundreds of school children in the city of Mooseheart , Illinois, to
determine the effects of adding the uncooked juices of citrus fruits to a conventional diet. During the first year the children
were studied as controls; the second year was the test period, and the third the recheck period. Approximately 16 ounces of
freshly extracted raw orange juice, plus the raw juice of one lemon, was added to the diet of each of 341 children on each
day of the test period. This brought about a sharp increase in growth rate over the control period, as well as a 50 per cent
reduction in the incidence of dental caries and the almost complete disappearance of gingivitis. During the recheck period,
when the quantity of juice was reduced to three ounces a day, the accelerated growth was maintained, though dental decay
again increased and most of the gingivitis reappeared. copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 4Other fruits and juices also have therapeutic qualities. The "grape cure" is well known in parts of Europe and has found
extensive employment in the sanitariums and resorts of Merano, Italy, parts of France, and southern Germany. The patients
of these institutions are fed almost exclusively upon raw grapes for four to six weeks at a time, starting with about a pound a
day and gradually increasing the amount to five to eight pounds a day. Johanna Brandt reported a number of cures from
cancer through the employment of the raw grape diet, and others have used it successfully in the treatment of constipation,
rheumatism, catarrh, gallstones, eczema, jaundice, malaria, hemorrhages, and other ailments. Grape cures are even
recommended in certain mental disturbances and in weakened conditions of the entire muscular system, including the
heart. Raw cabbage juice has been used with remarkable success in treating ulcers. Dr. Garnett Chaney at Stanford University
treated 63 ulcer patients with one quart of raw cabbage juice per day, and 60 of these showed pronounced healing. In most
cases, the pain disappeared within a few days and recovery was complete within three weeks or less. Six patients with
"huge" ulcers required 56 days of treatment. The three patients who failed to respond had dense scar tissue in the stomach
and liver damage before treatment started. Dr. Chaney’s experience was almost duplicated by Dr. William Shive and his
colleagues at the University of Texas. Dr. Shive found that raw cabbage juice — as well as the juices of some other
vegetables — tends to prevent ulcers and to cure them. He studied 100 cases in which the ulcerous condition was so
severe that the use of the bland diet and anti-ulcer drugs had failed. But the drinking of one quart of fresh, raw cabbage
juice per day by these patients brought about marked beneficial results. The use of raw cabbage juice in amounts less than
one quart per day promotes less rapid recovery than does the full quota but it is of definite value, and even a glass of juice
per day tends to reduce or eliminate the pain in some cases. The raw cabbage juice is also an important aid to normal
elimination and it improves the general health of the ulcer patient as well as promoting recovery of his primary affliction. SCRAPED APPLE DIET
The "scraped apple" diet is an old German folk remedy for both diarrhea and constipation. Modern scientists have
employed raw apple in the treatment of these same conditions with very good effects. T. L. Birnberg treated diarrhea in
children with raw, grated apple and obtained completely successful results in 88 per cent of all cases. He noted relief from
abdominal pain achieved almost immediately, normal stools achieved in 24 hours, reduction of fever within 48 hours, and
disappearance of mucus in 60 hours. The beneficial effects of raw apple in these cases are attributed to the presence of
“hydrophilic colloids" in the food which absorb excessive water and furnish bulk to control peristalsis. RAW HONEY
Of particular interest is the therapeutic value of raw honey. This food has long been known as a "folk medicine" for hay
fever and asthma, and recent experimental studies conducted at the William Beaumond General Hospital in El Paso, Texas
have shown that raw honey containing the pollen of the offending grasses or weeds builds up a natural resistance to these
agents in the body, thereby offering relief to the hay fever victims. Studies made by P E. Weesen of the Frauenfelder
Sanitarium of Europe showed that patients given raw honey exceeded all others both in strength and healthy appearance. Dr. Paula Emrich tested 100 children, and found that those given raw honey achieved a 12 per cent increase in hemoglobin
content of their blood over the others. Dr. Rolleder gave a smaller quantity of raw honey to 58 children of an Austrian
orphanage and noted a hemoglobin increase of 8 1/2 per cent. Dr. Schacht of Wiesbaden claimed to have cured many
supposedly hopeless cases of gastric and intestinal ulcers with raw honey, and the celebrated Father Sebastian Kneipp
remarked that "smaller ulcers in the stomach are quickly contracted, broken and healed by it." Surprisingly, raw honey has
even been given to treat diabetes. Dr. A. Y. Davidov of Russia noted that it tended to prevent acetonemia, and in spite of its
high sugar content, its use was associated with the actual reduction of sugar in the urine. The American physicians, Dr. L.
R. Emerick of Eaton, Ohio, and the late Dr. R. J. Goss of Middlebury, Vermont, have treated hundreds of diabetic patients
with raw honey, achieving remarkable success and vast improvement in the weight, strength, and appearance of many
patients. RAW LIVER
The value of raw liver in treating pernicious anemia is now well known. As early as 1926 Drs. Murphy and Minot were curing
severe cases of this disease with raw liver, and they claimed there was some unidentified factor in the food which
stimulated the growth of red corpuscles. At first this was called the "red blood vitamin." It is now known that there are two
such factors, folic acid and vitamin B12, both of which are destroyed by heat. Thus, whereas well-cooked liver is practically
useless in these cases, raw liver brings about consistent and rapid recovery. For perhaps the same reason raw liver, given
to weak and undersized children, has been reported to increase vigor and improve the rate of growth. RAW MEAT PRODUCTS
Other raw meat products are also of unquestioned therapeutic importance. When tuberculosis was still a common disease
in this country, frail and consumptive people would be seen going to slaughterhouses to obtain draughts of fresh blood,
which were believed to be of great value in such cases. In countries where tuberculosis remains prevalent, this practice is
still followed, with reportedly good results. On a clinical basis the celebrated French physiologist, Prof. Charles Richet, was
among the first to use raw beef juice in the treatment of tuberculosis, and he reported excellent results in this practice. More
recently other European physicians are following this same method, and they apply the term, " zomotherapy" to designate
copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 5treatment of disease with raw meat or raw meat-juice. They claim success with zomotherapy in treating many conditions,
including anemia, neurasthenia, debility, convalescence, and latent, incipient, or active tuberculosis. RAW SEEDS
Few raw foods have been as highly recommended as sunflower seeds, squash seeds, pumpkin seeds, and watermelon
seeds in the treatment of disease. Several years ago, J. I. Rodale noticed that sunflower seeds, when used in their raw
state, effected a remarkable cure for some cases of bleeding gums. After his report on this subject was published, new
evidence accumulated which indicated that raw sunflower seeds were also useful in treating sores, dermatitis, rheumatism,
rheumatic fever, arthritis, and kidney disease. The teeth were said to improve under the sunflower seed treatment, as was
the condition of the eyes. Raw squash and pumpkin seeds have been recommended as worm expellents. An infusion made
by soaking dried watermelon seeds in water was an old Indian folk treatment for kidney and bladder infections, and many in
modern life have also testified as to the efficiency of this treatment. The watermelon seeds may also be eaten in their fresh
state with good results. While much of the evidence in favor of these uncooked seed foods is in the form of testimonials
rather than clinical data, it is too extensive to be ignored. Whether we consider the seeds as effective "folk medicine" or just
good food, they are doubtless of much value in modern nutrition. IMPROVED INTELLIGENCE
Raw foods have even been used to improve the intelligence quotients and mental attitudes of backward children. In
Germany, Dr. Lottner reported an experiment in which 33 children, having low intelligent quotients and attending a school
for backward children, were given a raw breakfast each morning. This was in the form of " muesli ” an uncooked porridge
made from oat flakes, milk, fruits, nuts, and honey. The children given the raw breakfasts rapidly improved over all the
others. They did better work in dictation, arithmetic, letter-canceling, and drawing completion tests. They were also less
restless, did not become tired as rapidly as before, and showed better concentration in accomplishing their daily work. CLINICAL APPLICATION OF THE RAW FOOD DIET
IN CALIFORNIA
If the simple addition of certain raw foods to a normal diet produces such startling changes in human health, it may be
expected that a diet composed entirely, or nearly so, of raw foods would be much more beneficial and achieve more rapid
and far-reaching results. This has been shown to be true at the Pottenger Sanitarium in California, where a large variety of
raw foods has been employed for therapeutic purposes. Dr. Pottenger writes that "the highest grade of raw milk, raw meat, raw vegetables and fruit products obtainable" are used in
the clinical work. He points out that "we have been able to improve the physiologic response of children who have
previously been developing in a deficient manner" similar to the experimental animals which were fed upon heat-processed
foods. Even defective facial growth has been improved, and Pottenger states that "when additional growth stimulation is
applied to certain deficient children at the right time, before they have attained facial growth, material changes in the
contour of the face can brought about without the application of surgical appliances." IN EUROPE
In Europe a diet composed primarily of raw foods was employed in the treatment of disease as early as the latter part of the
nineteenth century. At that time the " Jungborn" a health resort located in the Hartz mountain region between Isenburg and
Hartzburg of Germany, was opened. The director of this institution was Adolph Just, a philosopher and naturalist, who
concluded from his observations of wild and domestic animal life that only raw foods were capable of building the health,
strength, and vigor that are normal in nature. At his resort, Mr. Just provided sun and air baths, special water baths, and
earth compresses as treatment in addition to raw foods. The diet consisted in the main of fruits, berries, nuts, and milk in
the uncooked state. In 1896, Mr. Just issued a number of case history records illustrating the results of his raw food and natural treatment
therapy. Among the diseases reported cured or benefited were inflammatory rheumatism, consumption of the spinal cord,
tuberculosis of the bones, dropsy, incipient dropsy, fistula of the rectum, cancer, nervous spasms, deafness, and various
digestive ailments and sexual disorders. Recoveries were often rapid as well as complete. Recovery from severe nervous
disorders was achieved in ten weeks, from deafness in eight weeks, from inflammatory rheumatism in nine days, and from
incipient dropsy in less than a week. Great improvement in cases of different forms of consumption was noted during the
first two weeks of treatment. In almost all cases treated at the " Jungborn" some benefit was reported, and the general
success was attributed largely to the use of raw foods. BIRCHER-BENNER
During the year, 1897, another great raw food institution was opened in Europe, this being the famous Bircher- Benner clinic
and sanitarium in Zurich, Switzerland, which continues operation in the present day. Here extensive use has been made of
raw foods, and some patients have been placed on an exclusive raw diet for a limited period of time when this was deemed
necessary. The late founder of the institution, Dr. Bircher- Benner, stated that "raw vegetable food is the most potent healing
copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 6factor that exists" which is able "to bring healing to very many widely spread disorders of health and serious diseases, in
quite astonishing fashion, where all other curative measures have failed." He called raw food "sunlight food" and referred to
his delicious preparations of fruits, vegetables, nuts, honey, milk and other foods, all in their raw state, as "sunlight dishes." The success of this sanitarium has been so phenomenal that it has attracted patients from all over the world. It is best
known for its treatment of digestive diseases. So astonishing was the recovery, on a strictly raw diet, of one supposedly
incurable patient suffering from the Herter-Heubner disease that it attracted the attention of the children’s hospital in Zurich,
which in turn introduced a raw diet for its coeliac patients. The medical director of the hospital at the time published a
monograph giving an account of the "staggering success" thus achieved. Today Dr. Ralph E. Bircher carries on the important work of his father at the clinic and sanitarium, with equally satisfactory
results. He describes raw food in relation to "the five zones of its influence." In the first zone the effects are noticeable within
a few days, with the "return of appetite, rapid fading of unnatural thirst" and "much better digestion." In the second zone,
embracing weeks of time, the circulatory system responds to the curative effects of raw food. The third zone "needs months
to become effective," though some improvement may be noticed almost immediately. It covers the endocrine glands and
metabolism. The fourth zone, embracing the capillary system and secondary effects on all parts of the organism, is reported
by Dr. Bircher to require one to three years, sometimes less, "to show the effects of its domain." The entire four-fold action,
according to Dr. Bircher, "generally brings about a complete change in obstinate cases of many chronic conditions such as
stomatitis and ulcers, spine, amoebic dysentery, lambliosis and malaria, kidney troubles, jaundice, eczemas and urticaria,
headaches, and schizophrenias , also in cases of varicose, thrombophlebitis and many other conditions." The fifth zone
applies to the constitution itself, from which our diseases and infections originate. It means a fundamental change in the
physiological efficiency of the entire body, with new vitality and vigorous health. At the First Medical Clinic of the University of Vienna, two scientists, Eppinger and Kaunitz, tested the Bircher- Benner raw
food diet as a means of improving the interchange of energies and substances between the ends of the blood vessels
(capillaries) and the tissue cells of the body. Under normal conditions of life, the blood gives up its nutritive substances, and
the cells give up their waste substances in this interchange through two fine membranes and a narrow dividing interstice. Often, however, the cells lose a part of their "selective capacity" because of salt penetrating the cell wall, distortion and
spasms of the capillaries, a sticky coating of blood globules, waste products ,being scattered around the cells, and
reduction of the chemical, physical, and electrical tensions which promote the nutritive interchange. When this happens,
cells cannot rejuvenate fast enough; bacteria tend to multiply too rapidly, and the general cause of many clinical symptoms
of disease is in existence. Eppinger and Kaunitz studied this condition and tried every possible means of restoring normal
selective power in the cells once this had been lost. Only one measure was found to be successful. This was the application
of an exclusive raw food diet "exactly according to the prescriptions of Dr. Bircher- Benner." Under the influence of this diet,
the life-giving tensions between capillaries and cells grew and the capillaries were slowly restored to a normal, vigorous
condition. HUMLEGAARDEN
In Denmark an exclusive raw diet consisting of fruits, vegetables, nuts, cornmeal, sprouted grains and legumes, honey, and
milk is given for all patients who visit the " Humlegaarden" a sanitarium located near Humlebek. Dr. Kristine Nolfi, medical
director of this sanitarium, was formerly associated in medicine and surgery with the Communal Hospital in Copenhagen
and also with the State Hospital in Pediatrics. During her years of hospital training she suffered from weak digestion and
catarrh of the stomach, and in the winter of 1940 and 1941 she observed the symptoms of cancer. A trial microscopy taken
at the Radium Centre in Copenhagen was positive, indicating there were cancer cells. Dr. I. Nolfi treated herself with an
exclusive raw diet and recovered excellent health. This success prompted her to open the " Humlegaarden" where not only
all patients, but even members of the hospital staff, live entirely upon foods which have not been treated by heating. About
one thousand patients annually visit this sanitarium, and doctors from Denmark and foreign countries also visit the place
and make observations which are later utilized in their practice. The therapeutic successes attained at the " Humlegaarden" are said to be phenomenal. Dr. Nolfi attributes this to the
consumption of raw foods, and in particular to the use of raw garlic and raw potatoes. Patients at this sanitarium recover
from all manner of diseases, including cancer, sterility, obesity, diabetes, heart debilitation, high blood pressure,
rheumatism, epilepsy, asthma, and many others. In some cases even grey hair darkens in color. According to Dr. Nolfi, the
raw diet "has a curative effect not only for a particular disease and on an individual organ, but on the organism as a whole. It cures not only the diseases contracted during our short span of life, but also those determined by hereditary
predispositions." OTHERS
Dr. K. Eimer, of the University Medical Clinic at Marburg-Lahn, has employed the raw diet in the treatment of many different
diseases. He reports that no gastric disturbances occur on the diet and that the relatively large amounts of cellulose in the
raw vegetable foods appear to aid peristalsis. He found the raw diet to be especially suitable in cases of renal or cardiac
oedema or the oedema of obesity, with the elimination of superfluous water and salt being rapidly achieved. In diseases of
the circulatory system, the diet was found to usefully supplement other treatment, and high blood pressure and diabetes
were found to be benefited through the use of raw food. The blood was improved on the raw diet, and the alkali reserve was
copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 7raised an average of 20 per cent among the patients. Dr. Eimer also reported that the refractive index of the serum
increased through the use of raw foods. Of equal importance is the experience of Dr. Joseph Evers in Germany, who has treated 600 cases of multiple sclerosis
with diets containing no refined foods, and consisting chiefly of raw fruits, raw nuts, raw vegetable roots, raw honey, raw
grain sprouts, uncooked coarse rolled oats, wholemeal bread, raw ham, raw bacon, and raw chopped beef. Dr. Ever’s
dietary treatment was set up under the controls of recognized scientists and tested in different universities, clinics,
hospitals, and sanatoriums. Results were surprisingly good, and 42 per cent of all patients showed improvement or
complete recovery. This percentage might appear to be low, but for multiple sclerosis, which consistently fails to yield to
orthodox medical treatment, a single recovery is worthy of mention. In the city of Munich, the German physicians, Friedrich and Peters, employed a raw diet consisting chiefly of fruits and
vegetables, and small amounts of meat. Many very severe cases of liver cirrhosis, with ascites were treated. Results,
surprisingly, were quite successful, and a number of most striking cases have been cited by the physicians to show the
value of raw foods in the treatment of this disease. Other physicians and scientists who have studied the raw diet in relation to therapeutic uses are D. C. Hare, J. F
Kinderheilk, W Heupe, I. Kanai, and M. Kuratsune. Dr. Hare, of the Royal Free Hospital in England, placed arthritic patients
on an exclusive raw diet for two weeks followed by a predominantly raw diet for several weeks. Most of the patients began
to feel better within one to four weeks, with marked improvement continuing thereafter. Kinderheilk found the raw diet to be
of value in avitaminosis, nephritis, diabetes, and chronic constipation. In cases of cardiac disease he noted that it promoted
the excretion of superfluous water and was thus helpful to the patients. Dr. Heupe, working at the University Medical
Polyclinic in Frankfurt, reported the diet to aid in the treatment of diarrhea of children, in heart and kidney diseases, and in
obesity and diabetes. Kanai of the University of Berlin, studied the effect of raw and cooked vegetarian diets on the
oxidation of the body. He noted that oxidation was impaired by cooked vegetarian foods. On the raw diet the urinary output
of nitrogen was greater, indicating better absorption, and the weight increase was better. Dr.Kuratsune, of Kyushu
University, Japan, also tested raw and vegetarian diets, and reported results were decidedly better on the raw regime. Heated vegetables tended to produce anemia, which was cured when raw vegetables were eaten. Other diseases, which
had failed to yield to conventional medical care, responded favorably to the raw diet. The sum total of all human experience with raw foods has thus been remarkably successful. As in the case with animals,
the efficiency of physiological function within the body, as well as the proportion of both infectious and degenerative
diseases, appears to correspond to a large degree with the relative quantity of raw and cooked foods in the diet. In the case
of raw and heated milk the evidence is especially conclusive, particularly with reference to the growth and bone and dental
development of children. In the clinics and sanitariums of the world, where a raw food diet has been employed, evidence of
the value of all types of raw foods has been obtained, and the raw diet is found to be of definite therapeutic value in the
treatment of many common diseases. Its value in this capacity is most pronounced, as it is associated with no adverse side-
effects, which so frequently follow the use of conventional medical treatments. THE POTTENGER EXPERIMENTS
Perhaps the most important of all the animal experiments with raw and cooked foods are those of Dr. Francis Pottenger, Jr.,
one of the world’s great physicians and food scientists. These were conducted at the long established Pottenger Sanitarium
in Monrovia, California, and covered a ten-year period. Both white rats and cats were employed. Rats given heated milk
suffered from many kinds of deterioration, and the change in trabeculation of the bones was particularly noticeable. With the
cats the experiments were reported in great detail and covered a large number of animals. A total of 900 cats were studied,
and complete records were kept of nearly 600 of them. Through generation after generation the animals were studied, and
Dr. Pottenger has issued the detailed results of the experiments as they apply to growth, reproduction, and all phases of the
animals’ health. In these tests the animals were fed upon meat-scraps (including the muscle, bone, and viscera), milk, and cod liver oil. The
animals were divided into various groups, depending upon the condition, whether heated or unheated, in which their foods
were given. Some of the cats were fed entirely upon raw meat and raw milk; others were given two-thirds cooked meat and
one-third raw milk. In some cases raw meat and pasteurized milk were used. A number of cats were also fed sweetened
condensed milk, evaporated milk, or raw metabolized vitamin D milk with raw meat. Cod liver oil was used by all animal
groups. The cats fed entirely upon raw meat and raw milk remained in excellent health in all cases. Physical development was
virtually perfect and the cats reproduced in homogeneity from one generation to the next, maintaining large skulls an
thoraxes, broad faces with prominent malar and orbital arches, broad and well-formed dental arches, adequate nasal
cavities, and large and long bodies. The cats were quite free from vermin, infections, and parasites. The membranes were
firm and of good pink color. All evidence of degeneration was absent. Abortion occurred very seldom; the size of the
average litter was five, and all of the mother cats nursed their young in a normal manner. The cats possessed excellent
copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 8equilibrium. Organic development was complete and normal physical and mental function was the general rule. Death
resulted only from old age or injuries sustained in fighting. None of the cats died from disease. Cats which were fed the cooked-meat scraps were defective in many respects. They were smaller in build and the bones
were smaller in diameter. In some cases the bones would grow out of proportion, with the hind legs being much longer than
the forelegs. The animals did not reproduce in homogeneity, each kitten being of a different skeletal pattern. There were
variations of facial structure similar to those of human beings. Configuration of the skulls was different in each individual cat. Often there would be marked failure in the development of the upper lip and in some cases a mandibular protrusion. Dental conditions would usually remain fairly good in the first generation, though gingivitis occasionally developed. Second
generation animals usually had much smaller primary teeth than normal and there was irregular spacing of teeth. Bleeding
of gums would increase considerably. Some teeth would be lost. In the third generation loss of most of the teeth through
decalcification and pyorrhea would be common. Dental development was generally so irregular that the development of the
whole face was interfered with. There was severe impairment of bone composition in all cases. The calcium content would fall from the normal 12 to 18 per
cent of bone weight in healthy animals to 8 to 12 per cent in the first generation, 3 1/2 to 7 per cent in the second
generation, and finally 1 1/2 to 3 per cent in the third generation. The phosphorus content also became progressively less,
and the third generation the bones would be very porous and similar to rubber. This resulted in bowlegs, distorted spines,
and other deformities. Reproductive efficiency was greatly lowered. Abortion ran from 25 per cent in the first generation to as high as 70 per cent
in the second generation. Deliveries were very difficult and many cats died in labor. Often the mother was unable to lactate. The mortality rate of the kittens was very high, many of them being even too frail to nurse. In a number of cases the mother
would steadily decline in health following birth of the kittens and die about three months later. Others had increasing
difficulty with subsequent pregnancies and some failed to become pregnant. In the males there was disturbance of genital
development and descent of the testes. Sterility was so common that raw-food males had to be used for all breeding
purposes. Development of the secondary sexual characteristics was incomplete. The degree of masculinity and femininity was
lessened and cats of both sexes tended to become more neutral in appearance. For instance, X-ray pictures showed that
skulls of third generation cooked-fed animals had neutral profiles for both sexes, as contrasted to the difference in raw-fed
animals. At the same time sex interest was very slack; in many cases it was perverted, with some cats developing into true
homosexuals. Most of the cats fed cooked meat were very irritable and would occasionally viciously bite the keeper. Intestinal parasites
and vermin were very common. Skin lesions and allergies became worse from one generation to the next. Pneumonia and
empyema were the most common causes of death in the adult stock; a great number died from diarrhea followed by
pneumonia. No cats survived the sixth month of life in the third generation. Among the diseased conditions that were found
upon autopsy were: osteomyelitis, cardiac lesions, hyperopia, thyroid disease, hepatitis, nephritis, paralysis, meningitis,
cystitis, arthritis, rickets, enlarged colon, bronchitis, fatty infiltration of the muscles, rachitic rosary of the ribs, and enlarged
bladder. Cats fed upon a combination of two-thirds pasteurized milk and one-third raw meat presented much of the same
deterioration as the other animals. Reproductive efficiency was lowered; skeletal structures were severely impaired; dental
irregularity and gingivitis were common, and all kittens showed some form of deficiency in development. Cats fed
evaporated milk were damaged even more, and sweetened condensed milk produced the most marked deficiencies of all. Even the raw metabolized vitamin D milk (from cattle fed irradiated yeast) proved harmful. The males showed osseous
disturbances following its use, and the adult males died within 10 months, with the young males failing to live beyond even
the second month. In some instances cats which had been fed either cooked meat or one of the forms of heated or vitamin D milk would be
placed upon a completely raw diet, which would be continued in subsequent generations. Improvement in resistance to
disease was noticed in the first and second generations in the "regenerating" animals, though there were still allergic
manifestations and reproduction was erratic. In the third generation there was considerable further improvement, and by the
fourth generation some of the animals returned to completely normal skeletal and tissue form. From these experiments as well as all others which have been reported, results of feeding raw and cooked foods under
laboratory conditions become readily apparent. It follows that, almost without exception, experimental animals thrive well
upon an exclusive diet of raw foods. With general uniformity they immediately suffer from various forms of deterioration —
physical, sexual, and mental — when given various forms of cooked foods. It has indeed been shown that members of
certain animal species fail to reach maturity and reproduce if sufficient cooked foods are included in their diet. The degree
of damage may vary to some degree with different animals, but in no instance have large quantities of heat-processed
foods been consumed over a long period of time without some harm being observed. The contrast is clearly observed in all
copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 9cases, and the many different animals used in the experiments show that the results do not apply to only certain kinds of
experimental animals, but may be accepted as a general principle in all such nutritional work. The following article which I wrote many years ago, and was published in “Dr. Shelton’s Hygienic Review”
entitled “What to Expect When You Improve Your Diet” will give you a preview of what most probably will be in
store for you, and the reasons why, as you begin your journey to a new and more beautiful life. This is the slightly longer original version of the article available from my website www.drbass.com. WHAT SYMPTOMS TO EXPECT WHEN YOU IMPROVE YOUR DIET(original version)
by Stanley S. Bass
If I were asked “which is the area of greatest misunderstanding and confusion in the field of nutrition? ”, I would immediately
be forced to reply, “It is the failure to properly understand and interpret the symptoms and changes which follow the
beginning of a better nutritional program.”
What is meant by a better nutritional program? It is the introduction of foods of higher quality in place of lower quality ones. For example - if a person replaces a protein rich food such a pork with beef, the beef may be considered the superior of the
two - due to its easier digestibility, lower and less saturated fat content, etc. Similarly chicken is superior to beef, and fish is
superior to chicken because of its more rapid digestibility and lower saturated fat content. Lima beans, lentils or chick peas,
which are eaten at the same meal with vegetables, are superior in all the nutrients needed to rebuild health than those
already mentioned. As we go higher on the scale of quality, we begin to include protein rich food which may be eaten in the unfired (raw) state,
such as cheese which is made from raw milk and unsalted. Then we ascend to the nuts and seeds which are eaten in the natural state (raw and unsalted). To summarize - the closer the food comes to the natural state in which it occurs, or the closer we come to its raw, unfired
(raw) form, the higher the quality is. In this condition, all the enzymes are found intact. The amino acids are in their finest form. The minerals, vitamins, trace
elements, carbohydrates and life force are present. This life force, in turn, is capable of reproducing tissue which is full of
life and longer lasting in structure. This same classification of quality which we analyzed in relation to protein rich foods applies to the carbohydrates (the
starches and sugar-rich foods), the fats and the mineral-rich foods (vegetables), etc. The quality of a nutritional program is dramatically improved by OMITTING toxic substances such, as coffee, tea, chocolate,
tobacco, salt, pepper, etc. What is the relation of quality of foods to recovery from illness? It is this in a nutshell - the HIGHER the quality of food we eat, the QUICKER we recover from disease - provided we are
able to properly digest and assimilate the quality-level
To this must be added the knowledge of
A) proper food-combining
B) proper order of eating the different kinds of food at a meal (e.g. the most easily digested food should be eaten first, the
more complex one second, and the most concentrated item last)
C) the correct quantity of food to be consumed (of each type) in the meal
D) the correct time for eating (when hungry, and not by the clock)
WHEN DIET IMPROVES THE BODY CASTS OUT ACCUMULATED TOXINS AND UNFIT TISSUES
Now - what happens when a person follows these rules and makes a decided improvement in the quality of food
consumed? Remarkable things begin to happen to the body (as well as the mind). The amazing intelligence present in every cell of the
body and the wisdom of the body in its operation, immediately becomes manifest. The rule may be stated thusly: When the quality of the food coming into the body is of higher quality than the tissues which
the body is made of, the body begins to discard the lower grade materials and tissues, to make room for the superior
materials which it uses to make new and healthier tissue. This is the plan of Nature - of evolution. The body is very selective and always aims for improvement - for better health. The
body always tries to produce health and always will, unless our interference is too great. Only then do we fail to recover and
degenerate further into disease. copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 10The remedial nature of many conditions such as colds, fevers, cuts, swellings, injuries, etc., furnish endless examples of
how the body tends towards health - always - unless we do something to stop the process. “WITHDRAWAL” SYMPTOMS FOLLOW USE OF IMPROVED DIET
What are the symptoms or signs which become evident when we first begin to omit the lower grade foods and instead
introduce superior foods - those which are most alive, more natural than we are accustomed to? When the use of toxic stimulant such as coffee, tea or cocoa is suddenly stopped, headaches are common and a let-down
occurs. This is due to the discard by the body of the toxins called caffeine and theobromine which are removed from the
tissues and transported through the blood stream to the eliminating organs. When the blood circulates through the brain
during its many bodily rounds before the noxious agents reach their final destination for elimination, these irritants register
in our consciousness as pain - in other words, headache. The let-down is due to the slower action of the heart - the resting
phase which follows the stimulation or more rapid heart action forced upon the body by certain poisons called stimulants. The more rapid heart beat (or pulse) produces a feeling of exhilaration and the slower action produces a depressed state of
mind. Usually within three days, the symptoms vanish and we feel stronger due to the recuperation which follows. To a lesser extent the same process occurs when we abandon lower quality foods and replace them with better foods. Lower quality foods have undergone more preparation. Spices, salt and other ingredients have been added, as they tend to
be more "stimulating" than less prepared and more natural foods. Animal foods such as meat, fowl, fish etc. are more
stimulating than cheese, nuts and vegetable proteins. Consequently the withdrawal of stimulation which follows the abandonment of animal food produces a slower heart action -
a resting phase - which registers in the mind as relaxation or a decrease of energy. This initial letdown lasts about ten days
or slightly longer, and is followed by an increase of strength, a feeling of diminishing stress and greater well-being. DON’T JUDGE RESULTS PREMATURELY
Now let us return to the symptoms which occur in the process of regeneration. The person who starts a better diet, stays on it for three days to a week and then quits will say, "Oh, I felt better on the old
diet - the new one makes me feel weak." He failed because he didn't give his body a chance to adjust and complete its first
phase of action - recuperation. If he had waited a while longer, he would have begun to feel better than before he started. During the initial stage (lasting about ten days on the average to several weeks in others), the vital energies which are
usually in the periphery or external part of the body such as the muscles and skin, begin to move to the vital internal organs
and start reconstruction. This shunting of much of the power to the internal region produces a feeling of less energy in the muscles, which the mind
interprets as some weakness. Actually, the power is increased, but most of it is being used for rebuilding the more
important organs and less of it is available for muscular work. Any weakness which is felt here is not true weakness, but merely a re-deploying of forces to the more important internal
parts. Here it is important for the person to stop wasting energy, and to rest and sleep more. This is a crucial phase , and if the
person resorts to stimulants of any kind, he will abort and defeat the regenerative intent of the body. It is important that he
have patience and faith here and just wait it out, and after a while he will get increasing strength which will exceed by far
what he felt before he began the new program. Success in recovery or improvement of health hinges upon the correct understanding of this point - realizing that the body is
using its main energies in more important internal work and not wasting it in external work involving muscle movements. Be
wise - take it easy here and relax. Just coast in your work and social obligations until you're out of the woods. As one continues on the improved diet and gradually raises the food quality, interesting symptoms begin to appear. The
body begins a process called “retracing.”
The cellular intelligence reasons something like this - “Oh! Look at all these fine materials coming in. How wonderful - now
we have a chance to get rid or this old garbage and build a beautiful new house. Let's get started immediately. Let's get this
excess bile out or the liver and gall bladder and send it to the intestines for elimination. Let's get the sludge moving out of
the arteries, veins and capillaries. These smelly, gassy, brain-stupefying masses have been here too long - out with them! These arthritic deposits in the joints need cleaning up! Let's get these irritating food preservatives, aspirins, sleeping pills
and drugs out of the way, along with these other masses of fat which have made life so burdensome for us for so long. Let's
get going till the job is done - till we have a beautiful house - and from there on we'll keep it a beautiful ideal model house." copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 11THE THREE PHASES OF METABOLISM (SUM TOTAL OF BODY FUNCTIONS)
1. During the first phase - called Catabolism - the accent is on elimination, or breaking down of tissue. The body begins to
clean house - to remove the garbage deposited in all the tissues - everywhere. During this period the body removes the
ashes from the furnace preparatory to getting a better fire. Here the accentuation is on removal of the gross and
immediate body obstructions. Wastes are discarded more rapidly than new tissue is made from the new food. This
becomes evident as weight loss. 2. This persists for awhile and is then followed by the second phase - called Stabilization . Here the weight remains more
or less stable. During this phase, the amount of waste material being discarded daily is equal to the amount of tissue
which is being formed and replaced by the newer, more vital food. This occurs after the excess of obstructing material
in the tissues has been removed. 3. This stage persists for a while and is then followed by a third phase - a building-up period called Anabolism, wherein
weight starts to go up, even though the diet is lower in calories than it was before. At this point, much or most of the
interfering wastes have already been discarded - the tissues which have been formed since the diet was raised in
quality are more durable and do not break down easily. Also new tissues are now being formed faster. This is due to
the improved assimilation and increase of enzyme efficiency which resulted from the recuperation of the digestive
mechanism - made possible by the ceasing of wrong food-combining. The body's need for the usual amounts of food
decreases, and we are able to maintain our weight and increased energies with less food. Many are able to function
very efficiently on two meals a day, and eventually even on one meal a day. As the body progressively increases in efficiency and decreases in tissue breakdown under exercise, so do we gradually
need less and less food to maintain life . The higher the percentage of raw food one lives on, the slower the rate of tissue deterioration which one evolves into. A
sick body requires a gradual carefully worked-out entry into this stage - where one is able to live on a 100% unfired (raw)
diet. Returning to the symptoms which occur on a superior nutritional program - people who have had tendencies in the past to
recurring skin rashes or eruptions will frequently tend to eliminate poisons and harmful drugs through the skin with new
rashes or eruptions. If they go to a physician now who is not familiar with this aspect of nutrition, he will diagnose it as an
allergy. They ask. "How come I'm eating better now than I ever did before, and instead I'm getting worse?" They don't understand
that the body is “retracing”. The skin is getting more alive and active. It's throwing out more poisons more rapidly now that the body is building more
power which is saved from those hard-to-ingest meals which have been discontinued. These toxins being discarded are saving you from more serious disease which will result if you keep them in your body too
much longer - possibly hepatitis, kidney disorders, blood disease, heart disease, arthritis, nerve degenerations or even
cancer - depending upon your structural weaknesses. Be happy you're paying your bills now on an easy-payment plan. With some, colds which haven't appeared for a long time may occur, or even fevers. This is nature's way of housecleaning. Understand that these actions are constructive , even though unpleasant at the moment. Don't , but don't , try to stop these
symptoms by the use of certain drugs, or even massive doses of vitamins, which will act as drugs in huge concentration. These symptoms are part of a remedial process. Don't try to “cure” the remedial process! These are not deficiency
conditions or allergic manifestations - not if you're eating properly in quality, quantity, combination and sequence. Here is where experienced advice is of great value. Unfortunately, there are few books present today which give full
guidance to the average reader. Try to find guidance through a doctor or teacher who has the requisite experience in this
most confusing of all subjects - Nutrition in relation to health and disease. BODY PURIFICATION CAN BE A LONG DRAWN OUT PROCESS
You may he eating perfectly in regard to quantity, quality and observing all the correct rules, and still symptoms will occur. Those who have lived better lives in the past - who have eaten better foods and who have abused their bodies less with
overeating will have reactions ranging from almost none at all or very mild symptoms which may be uncomfortable or acute. Those who have lived worse lives and poisoned themselves more will experience more severe symptoms - if their liver,
kidneys, or other important eliminating organs have been damaged. When they have been renovated to the point of fair
working order, they will no longer produce symptoms. Headaches may occur at the beginning. Fever, colds, the skin may break out, a short interval of bowel sluggishness,
occasional diarrhea, feelings of tiredness and weakness, disinclination to exercise, nervousness, irritability, negativity or
mental depression, frequent urination, also may occur. However, the great majority of people find their reactions tolerable and are encouraged to bear with them, because of the
many improvements which have already occurred and are becoming more evident with each day. This acts as an
inspirational force to them. copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 12The symptoms will vary according to the materials being discarded, the condition of the organs involved in the elimination
and the amount of energy you have available. The more you rest and sleep when symptoms are present, the milder they
are and the more quickly they are terminated. Be happy you are having symptoms. Realize deeply that your body is becoming younger and healthier every day, because you are throwing off more and more
wastes which would eventually have brought pain, disease and much suffering. Those who have the worst symptom-reactions and follow through to their successful termination are thus avoiding some of
the worst diseases which would eventually have developed had they continued their careless eating habits. BLISSFUL STATE OF HEALTH COMES EVENTUALLY
Don't expect to go on an ascending scale of quality, that improving your diet will make you feel better and better each day
until you reach perfection. The body is cyclical in nature. and health returns in a series of gradually diminishing cycles. For example - you start a better diet and for a while you feel much better. After some time, a symptom occurs - you feel
nauseous for a day and have diarrhea with a foul-smelling stool. After one day you feel even better than before and it goes
fine for awhile. Then you suddenly develop a cold , feel chills and lose your appetite. After about two or three days
(assuming you don't take drugs or do anything else about it), you suddenly recover and feel better than you did for years. Let us say this wellbeing continues for two months, when you suddenly develop an itch or rash. You don't take anything
special for it. This rash flares up, gets worse and continues for ten days, and suddenly subsides. Immediately after this you
find that your hepatitis is gone and your energy has increased more than ever before. The rash became an outlet for the
poisons in the liver which produced the hepatitis. This is how recovery occurs - like the cycles in the Dow-Jones Average at the beginning of a bull market recovery. You feel better, a reaction occurs and you don't feel as well for a short while. You recover and go even higher. And so it goes, each reaction milder than the last as the body becomes purer, each becoming shorter in duration, feeling
better than ever before, until you reach a level plateau of vibrant health. Here you become relatively disease-free and are filled with ever-increasing joy, life and the happiness which comes from
sheer well-being. The mind opens up and expands to ever-higher horizons and your soul will shout for joy. You begin to
love the world, the universe and everything in it. This is the natural state of the mind - blissful, joyful and at peace with the
universe - and it can only be attained by alignment with biological laws. The first laws we must learn to obey are the laws of Nature. We must learn to eat simple pure and natural foods, properly
prepared and combined, and our bodies in return will cast off all the evil we have taken in during our lives. Nowhere is the
principle of forgiveness of sins more manifest than here - in our own bodies - when we forsake our evil and destructive
ways of eating (the defiling of the temple of the soul). God (or Nature, if you please) gives us a whole new chance for a new
glorious life. All repentance must begin here in the body, through pure diet and natural foods. Then, just have faith, sit back and watch
what happens. Before your own eyes, you will daily see signs that will cause you to wonder at this vast intelligence in
operation that staggers the comprehension. The mysteries of the body, the operations of Nature, the vital forces working in Nature and the Cosmos are far beyond what
our minds are prepared to understand at present. Every great physician or scientist who ever lived marveled in awe and humility at the wonders of nature. Yes - we are
"Fearfully and Wonderfully Made." Let us give ourselves a chance to experience what it means to be really healthy and fully ALIVE - to feel the joy of living by
aligning ourselves to (God’s) Nature’s laws as intended for man, through the eating of natural (normal) foods. This indeed is
the prime prerequisite in man’s physical, mental and spiritual unfoldment. Stanley S. Bass, 1973
Published in Dr. Shelton’s Hygienic Review, January 1973
(NOTE: The above article is written to explain the process of body regeneration, thanks to improved diet using natural foods, and is not to be associated
with the recommendation of any specific product offered for sale . ) Finally, I would like to include a brief case-history of a most impressive recovery from “How I Overcame Inoperable Cancer”
by a Naturopath, Wong Hon Sun, N.D. It is also included as Appendix B in “Discovery of the Ultimate Diet.”
A MOST INTERESTING CASE OF RECOVERY FROM CANCER ON ONE
MEAL A DAY ON A RAW FOOD REGIMEN
by Wong Hon Sun
The following is from the book How I Overcame Inoperable Cancer by Wong Hon Sun, ND,
with a forward by Dr. Ralph Bircher (Exposition Press, Hicksville, N.Y. 1975). copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 13 At the age of 32, Wong Hon Sun found himself to be a victim of a critical form ( anaplastic epidermoid carcinoma) of nose
and throat cancer, large and inoperable, in 1960, and by employing principles of natural healing on his own initiative, made
an unexpected complete recovery (as confirmed by medical checkups), with no recurrence of any symptoms of the disease
for the past 14 years. Before he began his self-care, he had a lump at the back of his throat which began to interfere with both his speech and
swallowing. He was constitutionally anemic, had chronic nasal catarrh with intermittent nose bleeds, was extremely
emaciated and undernourished. He had radiation treatment five times a week for two weeks. This was followed by a biopsy. After the radiation, an agonizing parchedness of his mouth and throat followed by nausea caused him to go on nothing but
occasional sips of coconut water after which his weight dropped to 75 lbs. His nausea ended after a three day water fast
after which he began drinking fresh squeezed pineapple juice alternating with liver extract every four hours. He soon recovered his strength. He began daily walking to induce sweating for “detoxication purposes.” When he returned
at noon-time, he drank large quantities of the liver extract (made by steaming the liver) and fresh pineapple juice. In order to
completely eliminate the toxemia in his system, he believed that short of complete fasting the cancer patient may have to
restrict himself to one meal a day. “This Single Meal Routine acted as the best natural safeguard against excessive nutrient
intake, while providing the minimum quantity necessary for normal physiological function.”
“It is also tantamount to a 24-hour fast in its therapeutic effects, can be carried on indefinitely, because it vitalizes (provided
that the ensuing diet is of high nutritive value), rather than weakens as prolonged fasting does.” The body adapts itself to a
reduced daily food intake by lowering the basal metabolic rate, which, within limits, is favorable to early recovery from
cancer, provided vitality is maintained. The resulting conservation of energy enhances the body’s intrinsic healing power for
the fight against cancer. On the Single Meal Routine, he took solid liver, about 100 grams of raw liver, 3 1/2 oz. | Natural_Hygiene_Recoveries.txt | Summarize the following text section accurately and concisely. Maintain specific details and numerical information, and use anti-repetition mechanisms:
MILLIONS OF DOLLARS ARE SPENT ON DRUG-ADVERTISING - WHILE DRUG-FREE HEALING IS ALMOST UNKNOWN
EVEN SOCALLED ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE USUALLY PROMOTES DRUGS - HELP SPREAD KNOWLEDGE OF DRUG-FREE HEALINGREMARKABLE RECOVERIES
FROM
SEVERE HEALTH PROBLEMS
by Stanley S. BassN. D. , D. C. , Ph. | [
{
"A": "Dr. Stanley S. Bass focuses on the importance of drug-free natural healing and promoting the benefits of raw food diets.",
"Q": "What is the main focus of Dr. Stanley S. Bass's work?"
},
{
"A": "Dr. Kirshner's research suggests that raw juices can be used to treat various diseases, including cancer, and can be more effective than traditional treatments.",
"Q": "What is the primary benefit of using raw juices, according to Dr. Kirshner's research?"
},
{
"A": "The institution in California is the Pottenger Sanitarium.",
"Q": "What is the name of the institution in California that provides raw food therapy?"
},
{
"A": "The doctor who conducted the experiment on cats is Dr. Joseph Evers.",
"Q": "What is the name of the doctor who treated 600 cats with a raw diet and observed significant improvements in their health?"
},
{
"A": "Dr. Bass's booklet is focused on the importance of drug-free natural healing and the benefits of raw food diets.",
"Q": "What is the primary focus of Dr. Bass's booklet?"
}
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in weight, equal to approximately 30
grams of protein) which he felt he needed for his anemia and sub-normal blood count. Also, he was unable to digest
cheese, nuts, or pulses without gastric discomfort, thus necessitating the use of liver for tissue building protein and iron. Then, too, the use of 100% raw foods, both animal and vegetable, provided hormones, enzymes, and other vital elements
needed for regeneration. To make the raw liver palatable, he immersed it in scalding water for several minutes, which made it taste enjoyably good. He gradually reduced the scalding time to a few seconds and was able to eat it with relish. This he alternated with raw eggs
of various species, but mostly hen’s. One day liver and the next day some eggs. Since he couldn’t handle the leafy
vegetables, tubers, or nuts, he used fresh, ripe, and uncooked fruits of a softer variety. He was able to maintain his nitrogen
balance on some eggs one day and 3 1/2 oz. of liver the following day. This was rather remarkable, since when he felt
unwell, he always fasted on water, so that he took much less than 100 grams of liver on the average, on the alternative liver
days. The balance of the diet was made up of fresh fruits which formed its main basis. To ensure an adequate supply of
sugar, he took a few spoonfuls of honey or molasses as a dessert. On the raw liver (or raw egg) and fruit diet, he found that
he was able, not only to maintain, but gradually to increase, his vitality. And one day he felt energetic enough to indulge in
running exercises in the open fields (more than three months after the cessation of the radiation treatments). He ran daily to sweat out the toxins – rested in the afternoon – and then in the evenings he went on a hike. Then working
up a great thirst he would stop at stalls and have a hot beverage of boiled juices of certain melons and herbaceous plants
(leaves boiled and diluted with water). At night he took a warm bath followed by a brisk rubdown. He gradually increased
the running to one, two, and three miles, and the tumor gradually regressed, and the breathing became easier. “My diet of raw liver, eggs, and fresh fruits provided me with a good supply of B complex containing B 6 , vitamin C, iron
and lecithin, and I further took some honey, red palm oil, brewer’s yeast, and wheat germ as nutritive supplements.” It took
more than six months for the inflammation on his face to subside completely and more than a year for his features to
become normal. The irradiated areas eventually healed, but some permanent scars remained. “I had to depend upon eggs
and fish liver for my supply of vitamin D.” Fish liver also contains some calcium and phosphorus, but these two minerals
occur in greater quantities in egg, which also contain vitamins A and D.
RAW VEGETABLE THERAPY
With gradual digestive improvement, he was able to add raw tomatoes and cucumbers and by dipping lettuce, celery, and
cabbage in boiling water for only a few seconds, they were made palatable. He juiced hard raw vegetables like carrots. With advancing years, he reduced his intake of liver, totally excluding other animal flesh. He accustomed himself to some
cheese in addition to eggs, getting a good supply of essential amino acids. He then added plant proteins such as soybean
in the form of easily digestible curds, adding a dressing of ground nut oil. Also added were legumes, ground nuts, lotus
seeds, and natural supplements like wheat germ and yeast. As his anemic condition improved, he took liver once a week or
two weeks and relied mainly on sugar cane, beans, spinach, and other iron-rich plant foods. Thus, he gradually learned to
maintain his nitrogen equilibrium without having to take meat every day. copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 14 On his almost meatless and low starch diet, he was constantly on guard against the development of hypoproteinemia and
hypoglycemia. On some occasions he did experience mild symptoms of these conditions, but by repeatedly adjusting his
menu, he was gradually able to assess his daily requirements of protein and sugar. He always made allowance for vital
food factors as yet undiscovered, so he followed no fixed menu based on known nutrients, but constantly altered his menu. “Raw vegetable therapy, when judiciously carried out, could be a great help to the cancer patient in his fight for survival,
but for the therapy to be successful, a sound knowledge of the nutrients – particularly of essential amino acids – present in
various types of food is essential.”
Wong was convinced of the importance of auto-psychotherapy, wherein the patient understood that the human body is
self-healing and the natural tendency in illness is always towards recovery (called homeostasis), provided that the
causation of the illness is removed. Faith and determination in one’s recovery are essential, and if the physician can instill in
the patient the faith in the intrinsic power of the body to fight off the disease, and assure him of the chances of a final
victory, the best chances of success are then possible. Add to this the inspiration and confidence which comes when the
patient sees progressive improvement in his condition, the gradual abatement and regression of his cancerous growth, as
well as the steady increase in strength and vigor, and success is assured. In his recovery from cancer, all his chronic afflictions which existed prior to his developing cancer disappeared – viz. colds,
sore throat, sinusitis, gingivitis, hay fever, indigestion, and insomnia. His sense of smell and taste gradually returned , the
tumor continued to regress slowly but surely, and within eight months he was completely cleared of nasal obstruction. He
was carefully examined at a hospital and the doctor stated, “You seem to be all right. There’s no trace of the tumor.”
He learned to avoid the cancer recurrence which he so greatly feared, by constant vigilance. By his 35th birthday, he was
so improved in health and vigor that he was able to jog for hours without feeling unduly tired. “And all the while I had adhered to the Single Meal Routine – a diet which gave me little more than 1000 calories of energy
daily. On the Single Meal Routine I have been able to maintain my body weight constant at 100 lbs. – not an abnormally low
weight for an Asian of average height. This amounts to a loss of only about 10 lbs. compared to my body weight in early
youth, when I was eating three or four meals a day. But paradoxically, my reduction in weight was compensated by
increased vigor, a keen appetite, and – most important of all – a gradual abatement of all my chronic ailments and complete
eradication of cancer.”
For the past 14 years since his biopsy, free from colds, hay fever, and catarrhal troubles and in recent years, with further
improvement in health and vigor, he was able to indulge in strenuous sports like badminton, judo, and weight lifting in
addition to running. “I must add that, despite my increasing daily expenditure of energy, I haven’t increased substantially the quantity of food
eaten daily. Yet, during the past few years, I have been able to gain a few pounds in weight. The mechanism of human
metabolism is certainly more complex than can be simply explained in terms of calorie requirements. ’”
The treatment for cancer does not end with the cure – the cure is just the beginning of the treatment. It is appalling to think
of the number of supposedly “cured” cancer patients who continue to die needlessly because they won’t make any personal
effort to guard against recurrence of the disease! “My recovery from cancer is in no way extraordinary or unique. The
recuperative power of the human body from illness to health can only be described as little short of amazing. The cure for
cancer must ultimately lie with the patient himself, and the reward of recovering is only for those who are prepared to
undergo with fortitude some degree of self-denial. “It is one of the most remarkable attributes of the human body that it can adapt itself to changes in habits of eating and
living with extreme flexibility. My Single Meal Routine, initially employed as a desperate measure to check a fatal disease,
has now become to me an established habit, inasmuch as I have come to look upon the three-meal-a-day routine as
something bothersome and tedious. I still adhere – though it is no longer necessary to do so with rigidity – to the raw food
diet, as I consider it a natural preventative against cancer recurrence. “My daily solo running has lost its initial boredom and become a pleasing habit. It has helped me build up a satisfactory
level of health; it has helped me, in my late forties, to maintain my blood pressure at around 120 mm (systolic) and to regain
and relive a youth long lost to ill health and disease. “To those cancer sufferers whose prospects of recovery seem dim, I would say ‘as long as there is still breath in the body
and the will to live, there is always hope... there will always be hope’.”
The recuperative power of the human body from illness to health can only be
described as little short of amazing. copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 15Interview with Dr. Bass
What problems can people run into during natural healing? When sick people begin to heal and detoxify they often seem to get even sicker. They may get new disease symptoms, like
headaches, colds, skin breakouts, fevers. This can cause some to panic and seek help from medical doctors, who will
prescribe drugs. Not a good idea, since drugs have an immediate effect of stopping the ongoing detox. So using drugs is a serious mistake. By avoiding necessary inner cleansing, people only prolong their disease, or even
make it worse. By allowing the detox, they will get well maximally fast. Is it possible to avoid detoxification symptoms? Orthopathic doctors can either design the natural recovery to be short and efficient with strong symptoms, if they think the
patient can handle it. Or design a really slow detox with very few, if any, symptoms. An example: As a young doctor I had a woman in her 60's who consulted me for high blood pressure. I noticed her fingers
seemed crooked from rheumatism, but didn't ask about it. I gave her an easy-to-follow diet of 3 meals per day - two raw and
one mixed cooked/raw. No water fasting. I adjusted the diet every month or 2 weeks when she came to visit. This was such
a slow detox that she didn't get detoxification symptoms. Her blood pressure improved steadily. When she came to visit the
8th month I noticed that her fingers looked straight, and asked her about it. Yes, she said, my fingers have straightened out
- and by the way, the diabetes I was suffering from is gone as well. I was elated , this was the first time I had seen an example of how our bodies heal all our diseases if given a chance. Can you give an example of detox symptoms? Currently I have a patient who has been using a walker for many years. His legs used to be normal, but were so severely
damaged by poisonous salves that he lost his ability to walk. The salves were prescribed by doctors for a parasitic infection. A very difficult case to solve. After going on a strict diet, his body started breaking out in severe blisters allover, which is a sign of detoxification via the
skin. Since this was very uncomfortable he was on the verge of giving up. It took three 21-day water fasts and a strict diet
during 9 months before the blisters disappeared. By now he has recovered most of his walking ability, and is well on his
way to full recovery. For more examples of detox symptoms, read "What Symptoms to Expect When You Improve Your Diet." Does it often take months to recover? It depends on the patient, and on what method is used, what combination of strict diet and fasting. This summer I have had
a patient in his 30's who was in terrible shape. When he came to me he feared he would die soon. He had many tumors
and a chronic backache, and had been to multiple doctors but only gotten worse. I asked him 2 questions: Are you willing to
go on a strict diet? Are you willing to have a short water fast? He was, and the result was a real miracle, in his own words. In less than 2 months his back ache is gone, his blood pressure is down, his tumors have almost disappeared, and he has
lost 40 lb of weight. What other methods or therapies do you use? I only use the most efficient methods available, which also are as close to nature as possible, in essence a combination of
high-quality diets and fasting. Together with general advice about improved lifestyle, e.g. sleep, rest, meditation, exercise,
breathing, sunshine, etc. E.g. to get rid of pain in shortest possible time, fasting is the best choice. Drugs, herbs and similar,
even products that claim to be detoxification-enhancing, only delay healing and must be avoided. Have you had any remarkable recoveries? Of the over 30,000 patients I have taken care of I would call almost all remarkable, and many miraculous. Especially since
people usually come to me in very serious condition, often as a last resort after having tried everything else for years, but
only getting worse. The more toxic people are due to dangerous drugs taken during many years, the more necessary
correct detoxification is. This interview was made 9-2005 by the Natural Hygiene Network of Houston, a non-profit organization. Dr. Stanley S. Bass in 2002
Stanley S. Bass , 3119 Coney island Ave., Brooklyn, New York 11235 PHONE: 718-648-1500
copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www.drbass.com 16Visit Dr. Stanley S. Bass website
www.drbass.com | Natural_Hygiene_Recoveries.txt | Summarize the following text section accurately and concisely. Maintain specific details and numerical information, and use anti-repetition mechanisms:
in weight, equal to approximately 30
grams of protein) which he felt he needed for his anemia and sub-normal blood count. Also, he was unable to digest
cheese, nuts, or pulses without gastric discomfort, thus necessitating the use of liver for tissue building protein and iron. Then, too, the use of 100% raw foods, both animal and vegetable, provided hormones, enzymes, and other vital elements
needed for regeneration. To make the raw liver palatable, he immersed it in scalding water for several minutes, which made it taste enjoyably good. He gradually reduced the scalding time to a few seconds and was able to eat it with relish. This he alternated with raw eggs
of various species, but mostly hen’s. One day liver and the next day some eggs. Since he couldn’t handle the leafy
vegetables, tubers, or nuts, he used fresh, ripe, and uncooked fruits of a softer variety. He was able to maintain his nitrogen
balance on some eggs one day and 3 1/2 oz. of liver the following day. This was rather remarkable, since when he felt
unwell, he always fasted on water, so that he took much less than 100 grams of liver on the average, on the alternative liver
days. The balance of the diet was made up of fresh fruits which formed its main basis. To ensure an adequate supply of
sugar, he took a few spoonfuls of honey or molasses as a dessert. On the raw liver (or raw egg) and fruit diet, he found that
he was able, not only to maintain, but gradually to increase, his vitality. And one day he felt energetic enough to indulge in
running exercises in the open fields (more than three months after the cessation of the radiation treatments). He ran daily to sweat out the toxins – rested in the afternoon – and then in the evenings he went on a hike. Then working
up a great thirst he would stop at stalls and have a hot beverage of boiled juices of certain melons and herbaceous plants
(leaves boiled and diluted with water). At night he took a warm bath followed by a brisk rubdown. He gradually increased
the running to one, two, and three miles, and the tumor gradually regressed, and the breathing became easier. “My diet of raw liver, eggs, and fresh fruits provided me with a good supply of B complex containing B 6, vitamin C, iron
and lecithin, and I further took some honey, red palm oil, brewer’s yeast, and wheat germ as nutritive supplements. ” It took
more than six months for the inflammation on his face to subside completely and more than a year for his features to
become normal. The irradiated areas eventually healed, but some permanent scars remained. “I had to depend upon eggs
and fish liver for my supply of vitamin D. ” Fish liver also contains some calcium and phosphorus, but these two minerals
occur in greater quantities in egg, which also contain vitamins A and D. RAW VEGETABLE THERAPY
With gradual digestive improvement, he was able to add raw tomatoes and cucumbers and by dipping lettuce, celery, and
cabbage in boiling water for only a few seconds, they were made palatable. He juiced hard raw vegetables like carrots. With advancing years, he reduced his intake of liver, totally excluding other animal flesh. He accustomed himself to some
cheese in addition to eggs, getting a good supply of essential amino acids. He then added plant proteins such as soybean
in the form of easily digestible curds, adding a dressing of ground nut oil. Also added were legumes, ground nuts, lotus
seeds, and natural supplements like wheat germ and yeast. As his anemic condition improved, he took liver once a week or
two weeks and relied mainly on sugar cane, beans, spinach, and other iron-rich plant foods. Thus, he gradually learned to
maintain his nitrogen equilibrium without having to take meat every day. copyright © Dr. Stanley S. Bass (718) 648-1500 www. drbass. com 14 On his almost meatless and low starch diet, he was constantly on guard against the development of hypoproteinemia and
hypoglycemia. On some occasions he did experience mild symptoms of these conditions, but by repeatedly adjusting his
menu, he was gradually able to assess his daily requirements of protein and sugar. He always made allowance for vital
food factors as yet undiscovered, so he followed no fixed menu based on known nutrients, but constantly altered his menu. “Raw vegetable therapy, when judiciously carried out, could be a great help to the cancer patient in his fight for survival,
but for the therapy to be successful, a sound knowledge of the nutrients – particularly of essential amino acids – present in
various types of food is essential. ”
Wong was convinced of the importance of auto-psychotherapy, wherein the patient understood that the human body is
self-healing and the natural tendency in illness is always towards recovery (called homeostasis), provided that the
causation of the illness is removed. Faith and determination in one’s recovery are essential, and if the physician can instill in
the patient the faith in the intrinsic power of the body to fight off the disease, and assure him of the chances of a final
victory, the best chances of success are then possible. Add to this the inspiration and confidence which comes when the
patient sees progressive improvement in his condition, the gradual abatement and regression of his cancerous growth, as
well as the steady increase in strength and vigor, and success is assured. In his recovery from cancer, all his chronic afflictions which existed prior to his developing cancer disappeared – viz. colds,
sore throat, sinusitis, gingivitis, hay fever, indigestion, and insomnia. His sense of smell and taste gradually returned, the
tumor continued to regress slowly but surely, and within eight months he was completely cleared of nasal obstruction. He
was carefully examined at a hospital and the doctor stated, “You seem to be all right. There’s no trace of the tumor. ”
He learned to avoid the cancer recurrence which he so greatly feared, by constant vigilance. By his 35th birthday, he was
so improved in health and vigor that he was able to jog for hours without feeling unduly tired. “And all the while I had adhered to the Single Meal Routine – a diet which gave me little more than 1000 calories of energy
daily. On the Single Meal Routine I have been able to maintain my body weight constant at 100 lbs. – not an abnormally low
weight for an Asian of average height. This amounts to a loss of only about 10 lbs. compared to my body weight in early
youth, when I was eating three or four meals a day. But paradoxically, my reduction in weight was compensated by
increased vigor, a keen appetite, and – most important of all – a gradual abatement of all my chronic ailments and complete
eradication of cancer. ”
For the past 14 years since his biopsy, free from colds, hay fever, and catarrhal troubles and in recent years, with further
improvement in health and vigor, he was able to indulge in strenuous sports like badminton, judo, and weight lifting in
addition to running. “I must add that, despite my increasing daily expenditure of energy, I haven’t increased substantially the quantity of food
eaten daily. Yet, during the past few years, I have been able to gain a few pounds in weight. The mechanism of human
metabolism is certainly more complex than can be simply explained in terms of calorie requirements. ’”
The treatment for cancer does not end with the cure – the cure is just the beginning of the treatment. It is appalling to think
of the number of supposedly “cured” cancer patients who continue to die needlessly because they won’t make any personal
effort to guard against recurrence of the disease. “My recovery from cancer is in no way extraordinary or unique. The
recuperative power of the human body from illness to health can only be described as little short of amazing. The cure for
cancer must ultimately lie with the patient himself, and the reward of recovering is only for those who are prepared to
undergo with fortitude some degree of self-denial. “It is one of the most remarkable attributes of the human body that it can adapt itself to changes in habits of eating and
living with extreme flexibility. My Single Meal Routine, initially employed as a desperate measure to check a fatal disease,
has now become to me an established habit, inasmuch as I have come to look upon the three-meal-a-day routine as
something bothersome and tedious. I still adhere – though it is no longer necessary to do so with rigidity – to the raw food
diet, as I consider it a natural preventative against cancer recurrence. “My daily solo running has lost its initial boredom and become a pleasing habit. It has helped me build up a satisfactory
level of health; it has helped me, in my late forties, to maintain my blood pressure at around 120 mm (systolic) and to regain
and relive a youth long lost to ill health and disease. “To those cancer sufferers whose prospects of recovery seem dim, I would say ‘as long as there is still breath in the body
and the will to live, there is always hope. there will always be hope’. ”
The recuperative power of the human body from illness to health can only be
described as little short of amazing. | [
{
"A": "The patient initially followed a diet consisting of raw liver, eggs, and fruits, and later added other foods such as cheese, soybeans, and plant proteins, as well as supplements.",
"Q": "What was the patient's initial diet, and what changes did he make to it over time?"
},
{
"A": "The patient experienced detoxification symptoms such as blisters, but he did not give up and continued his diet and fasting regimen, which ultimately led to his recovery.",
"Q": "What was the patient's experience with detoxification symptoms, and how did he manage them?"
},
{
"A": "The patient focused on a strict diet and fasting regimen, and advises that people should have faith in their body's ability to heal and avoid using drugs or other therapies that may hinder the healing process.",
"Q": "What was the patient's approach to recovery, and what advice does he give to others?"
},
{
"A": "The patient's health and energy levels improved significantly, and he was able to regain his strength, run, and engage in strenuous activities like badminton and weightlifting.",
"Q": "How did the patient's overall health and energy levels change over time?"
},
{
"A": "Dr. Bass uses a combination of high-quality diets and fasting, and emphasizes the importance of detoxification and avoiding the use of drugs or other therapies that may hinder the healing process.",
"Q": "What is Dr. Bass's approach to treatment, and what does he emphasize?"
}
] |
Deepak’s Guide to
THE
CHOPRA
CENTER
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing
chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | [email protected]
2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009HOLISTIC
HEALTHDeepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009DEEPAK’S GUIDE TO HOLISTIC HEALTH
Learn Daily Practices for Health and Wholeness
by Deepak Chopra, M.D. Co-founder of the Chopra Center for Wellbeing
The word holistic has come to refer to everything from organic food and massage therapy to herbal
supplements and Eastern healing practices, all of which are undeniably valuable and evidence of a growing
consciousness that earlier generations only dreamed of. At the Chopra Center, we define holistic in its
original sense – as related to wholeness. Wholeness is the union of mind, body, and spirit. It means that you
are a totality, not the sum of countless moving parts. In wholeness, you aren’t divided against yourself, and
the choices you make benefit you at every level. Just as the quality of your food, water, and exercise directly
affects the health of your body and mind, so the energy and information you take in through your mind and
sensory organs influence your body and spirit. There is a growing body of research establishing the inextricable connection of the mind, body, and spirit – and
the value of health practices that encompass all three aspects. The following guide to holistic health won’t tell you what kind of diet to follow or whether you need to
take vitamins. It will instead help you experience your own innate wholeness – and your own inextricable
connection to the universe – as you nurture your mind, body, and spirit. THE BODY IS A FLOWING RIVER
Your body is not a structure; it is a river that never stays the same. In every moment, your body is changing,
continuously exchanging its atoms and molecules with the rest of the universe. Right now hundreds of
thousands of chemical changes are taking place at the cellular level, transforming your body faster than you
can change your clothes. These changes aren’t random but are focused on serving the purpose of moving life
forward and preserving what’s best from the past. Yet change is also a choice. Your body has an infinite number of unknown possibilities, but it looks to you for
direction. When you introduce an intention, your body finds a way, on its own, to adapt to anything you want –
even to experiences that most people would describe as “spiritual. ”
For example, researchers have known for the past twenty years that the brain is “plastic” – that it isn’t fixed at
birth as previously believed but adapts to change. They have found that simple daily activity can quickly create
new neural networks. Even more remarkably, studies are now showing that mental activity alone can alter the
brain. With the cooperation of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, a group of brain researchers conducted a study of
Tibetan Buddhist monks who had been meditating regularly for between fifteen and forty years. In a laboratory,
the monks were hooked up to a functional MRI, a brain scan that can monitor changes in real time. When the
monks meditated on compassion, the scans showed that their brains generated the most intense gamma waves Deepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009ever seen in a normal brain. Gamma waves are associated with keeping the brain functioning as a whole and
with higher cognitive processes. The monks displayed the most intense area of activity in the left prefrontal cortex, an area associated with
happiness and positive thoughts. This study was remarkable because it was the first time that anyone had been
able to show conclusively that mental activity alone can alter the brain. We now have evidence that a mere
intention or desire (in this case, the desire to be compassionate) can train the brain to adapt. EXERCISE: TAKING SUBTLE ACTION
While gross actions involve direct contact with the physical world, subtle actions involve only the mind. Subtle
action comes naturally to all of us, but it can be easier to apply when you break it down into the following
steps:
1. Enter a state of restful awareness (through practices such as meditation and yoga) and make your
intention known. 2. Believe in getting results. 3. Flow with the process of change, letting go of resistance. At this point, the body will shift effortlessly at the physical level. Then you can repeat your subtle action until
you have experienced the change you desire. DISCOVER YOUR TRUE NATURE
Our authentic true self is pure, unconditioned consciousness. Until we remember that, however, we tend to
accept the illusion that we are our ego. The ego is essentially a gatekeeper. It allows in certain experiences,
which become “mine, ” and rejects other experiences. The ego is fundamentally insecure and defensive
because it believes that it is separate from the world and therefore must struggle to survive. The ego’s perspective inevitably leads us to experience unnecessary suffering, stress, and often even illness. But what can we do? This tendency to accept and reject comes naturally to the ego, for its job is to define “I, ”
and you can’t be everything to everybody – you must define yourself as “I” in some way. I have never favored trying to defeat, kill, or discipline the ego. My reasoning is that if life isn’t meant to be a
struggle, then it isn’t meant to be a struggle against the ego, either.Deepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009BEFRIENDING THE EGO
Instead of simply trying to get rid of the ego, which only puts it on the defensive, it is more effective to apply
yourself to discovering your real essence, your foundation of being. This is most effectively experienced through meditation or other mindfulness practices. As you meditate, the
presence of your deepest self will radiate its own truth to every cell in your body. It may display its quality as
peace or joyfulness. For others, it may have more of a flavor of universal love and compassion. Still others may
experience the presence as divine light, creativity or intelligence. As self-awareness dawns, the ego no longer
has to be a worried gatekeeper, a defender of the status quo. I also recommend a simple form of self-inquiry, such as the method taught by Byron Katie, to dismantle the
ego’s unexamined beliefs. You can learn more about Byron Katie’s inquiry process at thework.com . LISTEN TO YOUR BODY’S WISDOM
Without a sense of the rhythms and intelligence inherent in our physiology and consciousness, we ignore the
critical signals that our body has been cultured over eons to express in order to maintain balance. We neglect
to sleep and exercise, indulge beyond our capacities, go to bed too late, and then arise when the sun is well
aloft, wondering why we feel out of synch. We sabotage the delicate harmony and order encoded in our
chromosomes, our genetic gift of longevity that comes from keeping our tissues free from plaque and debris. A little imbalance in time becomes a disorder and then a disease, bringing on more stress and neglect. On the other hand, when we flow in harmony with our body’s natural rhythms, getting restful sleep, feeding
our senses with experiences, tastes, touch, aromas, sounds, and sights that uplift and nourish us, we usually
experience a greater state of health and wellbeing. Such a life promotes an integrated interaction of our brain’s one trillion neurons, allowing us to be present to
the multitude of perceptions that incessantly bombard us, to enjoy them for their beauty, to process them into
creative action, and to intuit the future and our role within it. TUNING IN . . . How do you make choices that keep you in harmony with your inner intelligence and rhythms? By tuning into
your body’s messages. The body always expresses itself through signals of comfort and discomfort. When choosing a certain path or behavior, ask your body, “How do you feel about this?” If your body sends
a signal of physical or emotional distress, pay attention and consider a different choice. If your body sends a
signal of comfort and eagerness, you may proceed. Whereas the mind lives in the past and the future, the body
resides in the now and never doubts itself. It knows the truth and will guide you toward the most evolutionary
choices.Deepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009TAKE TIME TO BE SILENT
The silent witness within each of us is the light of our pure consciousness. It is present at all times, in every
experience. Interestingly, Agni, the Vedic god of fire, is also known as the eternal witness. In Ayurvedic
physiology, the eight agnis are the fires of digestion, which must all be functioning properly for our body to
extract the full essence and benefits of the food, experiences, and sensory impressions we ingest. If these are
not fully digested, a metabolic residue or toxin known as ama remains in the body and can impair our health. When the light of our consciousness is awakened, our silent witness is fully present in every moment. That
light of witnessing completely metabolizes whatever experience we are having, whether pain or pleasure. It
also prevents the experience from becoming a future source of attachment, suffering, or delusion. The silent
witness keeps us in the present, unencumbered from our past conditioning or fear of the future. THE INNER QUIET OF MEDITATION
When you meditate, your internal dialogue becomes quiet. In silence, you experience the light of pure
consciousness. There are many ways to meditate. At the Chopra Center we teach Primordial Sound
Meditation, which is a form of mantra meditation. The mantra is selected based on your Vedic astrology chart. A mantra is a sound that has no history or meaning associated with it, which allows you to bypass the mind’s
natural tendency to get wrapped up in stories and thoughts. EXERCISE: THE I AM MEDITATION
If you don’t have a mantra, another meditation technique you can use is to close your eyes and simply repeat I
am silently to yourself. Remember that when Moses went to the burning bush and asked God his name, God
said, “I am that I am. ” I am represents infinite possibilities. There is no baggage attached to it. In Sanskrit, the
word aham refers to this same concept. Start with five minutes of meditation, then gradually build up to longer meditation periods. You’ll notice that
when you introduce the repetition of I am into your consciousness, it competes with your other thoughts until
gradually both your thoughts and the words I am become vague and abstract. Ultimately you’ll experience no
thought and no repetition . . . just the silence and peace of pure consciousness.Deepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009CULTIVATE SELF-REFERRAL
Self-referral is identifying with your inner self – the unchanging essence of your soul. This state has certain
characteristics, including an internal sense of joy or wellbeing regardless of what is happening in the exterior
world. In self-referral, you’re not attached to outcome or obsessed with power, money, or control; you’re in touch
with your feelings and you feel what you feel. You’re not easily offended and you don’t feel superior or inferior. In self-referral you have infinite freedom and are able to make spontaneous evolutionary choices. You’re not
anticipating a response and you’re not victimized by memory. You’re literally in the flow of the evolutionary
impulse of the universe. EXERCISE: THE FIRE IN YOUR EYES
Conscious inner dialogue is a powerful tool for expanding the state of self-referral. Whenever you look in the
mirror, even if just for a few seconds, make eye contact with yourself and silently repeat the three principles of
self-referral:
• I am totally independent of the good or bad opinion of others. • I am beneath no one, and no one is beneath me. • I am fearless in the face of any all challenges. Look into your eyes to see these attitudes reflected back at you. Look just at your eyes, not at your facial
expression. Look for the shine in your eyes that reflects the fire in your soul. If you do this exercise for a few
minutes every day, it can create profound shifts in your life.Deepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009BE GENEROUS OF SPIRIT
Wholeness is generous because it feels no lack. No matter how much you give, if you give freely more will
come to you. On the other hand, if you feel a pinch of lack underneath, it won’t be easy to give and you won’t
experience the joy of giving and receiving. Generosity begins at the level of the soul, which has an inexhaustible source of the two things that are vital
to life: energy and awareness. When you know at the deepest levels that you can never run short of these two
things, you will become generous of spirit and giving on any level will feel natural and easy. Here are the major gifts we all can give when we’re generous of spirit:
Offer yourself first. This means sharing the real you instead of the false self that most people offer the world. The false self is a something we develop to fit into society’s expectations and win external approval, while
the real self is open and vulnerable. It doesn’t feel a division between one soul and another. While social
conditioning can make it feel frightening to offer the real you, remember that fear often gives false counsel. When you offer the real you, you become stronger, stripping off the flimsy suit of armor that was an illusion all
along. When you share your true self, you offer your wholeness of spirit. Don’t withhold the truth. Whatever is false blocks spirit and prevents the flow of energy and awareness. Every time you speak your truth, you establish your own wholeness and evolution. This isn’t about standing
up for “absolute truths” but about being authentic and honest on the most intimate scale. In families where
someone has an alcohol or drug addiction and the other family members keep silent, they feel a sense of
helplessness and the problems fester. Speaking the truth opens up options and empowers. It shows caring. Be a force for harmony and coherence. Wholeness is a state of harmony, while fragmentation is a state of
conflict. The soul is a harmonizing influence that can transform any situation if you stay aware and focus your
intentions. In the face of conflict, you can act as a peaceful influence, whether silently or speaking up if that is
needed. Place your trust in abundance. Since wholeness contains everything, it draws on the infinite resources of
spirit. T rust that there will always be enough of what your soul has to give – enough love, compassion, caring,
intelligence, creativity, and attention. Abundance is about trusting the flow, knowing that wholeness doesn’t
have holes in it and never leaves a void. You can be generous with all the gifts of the soul and more will flow in. Deepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009RELEASE GRIEVANCES AND FORGIVE
The best way to understand forgiveness is to realize that to forgive and to ask for forgiveness is the best use of
one’s energy and also one of the most important paths to self-healing. The absence of forgiveness is holding
a grievance or resentment and also a subtle desire to seek vengeance. In short, it is hostility. Many studies
have shown that although anger can be a healthy release of pent-up energy, hostility is not healthy, and it is the
number one emotional risk factor for premature death from cardiovascular incidents (stroke and heart attack). Learning how to let go of toxic emotions such as hostility is the essence of learning how to forgive, because
forgiveness is about releasing your attachment or identification with a conditioned response. If you are holding onto a grievance or resentment or you feel hostility toward someone and are unable to
let go, I encourage you to read David Simon’s book Free to Love, Free to Heal. If you want to be personally
guided in the emotional detoxification and forgiveness process David presents in his book, you can attend the
Healing the Heart workshop at the Chopra Center (learn more at chopra.com/healingtheheart ). In the end, to forgive another is to forgive our self. What we think we are forgiving in another is an act of
freedom for our own soul. Every situation that calls for forgiveness is a step in our own evolution to higher
consciousness. PRACTICE THE LAW OF LEAST EFFORT
The Law of Least Effort is the principle of doing less to accomplish more. This involves a shift in awareness
more than anything else. Sometimes hard work, exacting plans, and driving ambitions will allow you to
accomplish goals in the material domain, yet at a huge cost because of the massive stress involved. You’re
relying on your own individual mind and efforts, which are tiny in comparison with the infinite intelligence of
the universe. By tapping into intelligence of the universe rather than relying on your ego’s limited strength, life
becomes much easier. Spiritual flow is effortless, spontaneous; it is full of flexibility and creativity. It’s a realm where you learn to let
go detach from the outcome, and experience life-centered present moment awareness. And it’s so joyful that
it can’t even be described. It seems like you and the universe are dancing together. There’s a song in your heart
and you don’t really care who’s listening or what they think. You just want to sing that song and you want to
move in tandem with the impulse of evolution which we call dharma. Deepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | 2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009The more time you spend in silence and meditation, the easier it becomes to align yourself the natural
harmony of the universe. There are also three useful steps you can take to benefit from the Law of Least Effort
in your life:
1. Practice Acceptance. Each day, have the intention to accept people situations, and events as they
occur. Know that this moment is as it should be because the universe it as it should be. 2. T ake responsibility. Once you’ve accepted things as they are, take responsibility for all those
situations you may see as problems. This doesn’t mean blaming yourself or others, but taking
whatever steps you can to transform circumstances into a greater benefit. 3. Establish your awareness in defenselessness. Let go of the need to defend your point of view. Stay
open to all perspectives without being rigidly attached to any of them. NURTURE YOUR INTENTIONS EVERY DAY
Daily life presents many unexpected demands and challenges, and it’s easy to fall into the grip of our ego’s
fears, demands, and confusion. It’s important to remind yourself of your intentions and spiritual purpose. Some people find it helpful to write down their intentions and review them each day; for others, periods of
regular meditation and prayer are invaluable. Spend time in silence, connect to your infinite nature, and center your intention inside yourself. Intend for
everything to work out as it should, and then let go and allow opportunities and openings to come your way. Practicing the above steps will help you experience your innate wholeness. When that happens, you will feel
subtle changes in the feelings and thoughts, including a sense that all is well. You will feel a lightness in your
body, deep peace, and the realization that your internal dialogue has become quieter. You may experience
healing on a physical or emotional level. You may also notice that you’re acting out of complete integrity and
that synchronicities and unexpected opportunities are becoming more abundant in your life. These are all signs
that you are connecting to your true nature, which is whole, infinite, and unbounded.© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing
chopra.com | 888.736.6895 | [email protected]
2013 Costa del Mar Rd., Carlsbad, CA 92009THE
CHOPRA
CENTER | Deepak_s_Guide_To_Holistic_Health.txt | Summarize the following text section accurately and concisely. Maintain specific details and numerical information, and use anti-repetition mechanisms:
Deepak’s Guide to
THE
CHOPRA
CENTER
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing
chopra. com | 888. 736. 6895 | learn@chopra. com
2013 Costa del Mar Rd. , Carlsbad, CA 92009HOLISTIC
HEALTHDeepak’s Guide to Holistic Health
© 2012, The Chopra Center for Wellbeing | chopra. | [
{
"A": "As related to wholeness.",
"Q": "What does the Chopra Center define the term \"holistic\" as?"
},
{
"A": "Helping the reader experience their own wholeness and inextricable connection to the universe.",
"Q": "What is the focus of the guide to holistic health, according to the author?"
},
{
"A": "The author recommends not trying to defeat or discipline the ego, but rather to discover one's authentic self.",
"Q": "What is the author's approach to dealing with the ego, according to the passage?"
},
{
"A": "It is the principle of doing less to accomplish more, and involves a shift in awareness rather than physical action.",
"Q": "What is the Law of Least Effort, as described in the text?"
},
{
"A": "Writing down and reviewing one's intentions daily, or spending time in silence and meditation to connect with one's infinite nature.",
"Q": "What is one way to nurture one's intentions, according to the text?"
}
] |