about kerala  
ayurveda bar
Enjoy linkair holiday India packages, offering exotic kerala holiday packages, North India Holiday packages, Rajasthan Holidays,Golden Triangle Tours,Ayurveda holidays in kerala, South india Holidays and more.
Ayurveda Principles
       AYURVEDIC KERALA
   About Kerala
   What is ayurveda
   Ayurveda History
   Ayurveda Principles
 Ayurveda packages
 Tourism packages
 backwaters & Houseboats
 Kerala Photo gallery
       SERVICES
   Ayurveda packages
   Meditation
   Online Ayurveda shoping   
   Ayurveda Massage
   treatments
   Online Consultation
       TREATMENTS
   Herbal Swedana
   Takra Dhara
   Ela Kizhi
   Njavara Kizhi
   Shirodhara
   Pizhichil
   Ksheera Dhara
   Shiro Vasthi
   Kashaya Vasthi
   Netra Tarapana          more >>
 
             Subscribe Newsletter

      email id   
    

 
     AYURVEDA PRINCIPLES

“You are what you eat.” Right, but only 50% right, according to the ancient healing tradition of Ayurveda. The combination of what you eat and what your body does with what you eat is what actually shapes health and well-being. According to Ayurveda, you are unique, and your dietary needs are unique too, determined by your body constitution, age, the season, your environment and your needs for balance at any given time. But there are some diet and digestion principles that are universally applicable. Here we present five that you can begin any time…the quick and-simple way to incorporate the Ayurvedic way of eating into your daily diet. Once you start seeing results, you can delve more deeply into doshas—Ayurvedic body types—and tailor a diet and digestion routine that’s best for you.

1. Add some zest to your life with lemon!

Add the freshly squeezed juice of half a lemon to a large cup of really warm water and drink first thing in the morning. Fresh lemon juice in moderation is good for all doshas. Lemon is a wonderful aid to internal cleansing. Antibacterial and antiseptic, lemon retards the presence of disease-causing bacteria in the digestive tract. It is also a digestion enhancer and helps reduce bloating and flatulence. It kindles a lethargic appetite, getting the digestive juices flowing. And it aids elimination, so your digestive tract is naturally flushed clear every morning. As an antioxidant, lemon helps fight disease-causing free radicals in the body. It helps keep your skin clear and your eyes sparkling.

More ways to use fresh lemon:

Add lemon zest to your herbal tea.

Squeeze some fresh lemon juice over your lentils.

Skip the fatty prepared dressing and opt for a squeeze of fresh lemon and a dash of extra-virgin olive oil over your salad.

 2. Say “No ice, please!”

According to Ayurveda, iced beverages, especially with or right after a meal, can really slow down digestion. Imagine pouring cold water over burning coals set up to cook your food. That’s effectively what you do to your digestive fires when you gulp down iced beverages with your meal. Instead, opt for digestion-enhancing drinks. Warm water infused with fragrant fennel helps enhance digestion, prevents bloating, and freshens your breath naturally. Cumin tea, or ginger-mint tea made with fresh ginger root slices and fresh mint leaves are great alternatives.

Warm herb/spice teas stimulate the digestion, help your body assimilate the nutrients from the foods you eat and help flush toxins from the system.

To make herb or spice teas, bring water to a boil, add the fresh herbs or spices, turn off the heat, and cover. Let steep for 5-7 minutes, strain and enjoy.

3. Invite all your senses to the table.

Digestion begins much before the first morsel of food goes down your throat. When food is prepared properly and presented beautifully, and your body and mind are receptive, all of your senses can aid digestion. When you eat mindfully, colors, flavors, aromas and textures blend to make the process of eating a delightful and productive experience.

Create an inviting, pleasant environment to aid in the enjoyment of a meal:

  • Keep the dining table free of clutter. Only your food should grace the table at mealtimes.
  • Diffuse appetizing aromas 30 minutes before your meal lemon, orange and coriander are wonderful for getting those digestive juices flowing.
  • Eat in a silent, serene atmosphere. Keeping your mind free of clutter while you eat will help your body and mind make the best use of what you’re ingesting.

4. Take a lunch break!

How many times a week do you “grab a quick bite” for lunch, use lunch as an excuse for getting business accomplished or skip lunch altogether?

According to Ayurvedic healers, lunch should be THE most important meal of the day. It’s the time of day when your digestion is naturally at its peak, and your body best able to complete the digest-absorb-assimilate cycle.

Yet most of us eat the biggest meal of the day at night, often not long before we go to bed, and the body has to rev up and work hard to digest the food at a time when it should be trying to get into rest mode. Unless you’re among the lucky few with a workhorse for a digestive system, eating heavy at night tends to result in undigested food clogging up your insides. You’ll find it harder to fall asleep, your skin might break out, you’ll gain weight easily, and you’ll not feel as energetic as you should during the day.

So take that lunch break, and eat your most substantial meal of the day around noon. Heavier foods and yogurt should be eaten at lunch rather than dinner for the same reasons.

And when you have five to ten precious extra minutes, take the time to just sit quietly after the meal, savoring the experience, before you resume activity. This will direct your body’s energy towards digestion before you draw it to other activities.

5. Drink to good health!

Water, the Ayurvedic beverage of choice, is crucial for digestion and absorption and to help flush toxins out of the body. It helps prevent bloating and constipation, and helps transport nutrients to the cells and tissues. It helps support the metabolism of fat.

Drink room temperature water or warm water through the day. Water spiked with digestion enhancing spices and herbs is even better. Light, clear vegetable broths, prepared fresh each day, are good detoxifiers and offer soothing comfort on cold winter days.

 


Dhanvantari

ayurveda_dhara_teatment

ayurveda pregnent

     CARING YOUR BODY TYPE

ayurveda wooden equipment

ayurveda ganapathy

Caring for your Body Type

Ayurveda sees everything in the universe, including human beings, as composed of five basic elements (or Panchamahabhutas): space, air, fire, water and earth.

These five elements in turn combine with each other to give rise to three bio-physical forces (or Doshas) within the human body- Vata (air and space), Pitta (fire and water) and Kapha (water and earth). Together they are known as Tridosha and govern all the biological, physiological and psychological functions of the mind and body, both, physical and emotional, as well as effecting how an individual interacts with everything around them.

Every individual has within them all three bio-physical forces, but it is the dominance of any one or two or all three that makes up a person's individual constitution or Prakriti.

Although a person's Dosha type is determined at the moment of conception, Doshas are constantly shifting within the body. Just as the five basic elements fluctuate within the nature, these elements will also fluctuate within the body. Therefore the Dosha dominance changes with age, time of day or night and the season etc.

Ayurveda seeks to treat the mind and body according to a person's Dosha using a system combining diet, herbal remedies, detoxification, Yoga, Ayurvedic massage, lifestyle routine and behaviours which stimulate positive emotions.

Ayurveda represents the ancient Indian art of healing. The basic principle of Ayurveda has remained same through thousands of years. In Ayurveda, human body is not considered just as a mass of organs, systems and tissues; but the complex mechanism' of myriad functions taking place both at physical and mental level are evaluated and described. In order to explain the functional complexity of human body, Ayurveda propounded few basic doctrines. These doctrines visualize the functional units of the body to be formed by three Dosha (humours), seven Dhatu (tissues) and Mala (metabolic end products) which are in equilibrium during health.The human body is more complex than any other form of life as on date. Purusha -the Human body is the aggregate of 25 elements, together with Atma -the spirit or soul. All ayurvedic studies conducted on herbal and holistic medicine in ancient India followed from the fountainhead of the two principle Ayurvedic schools.

The School of Physicians (Atreya) and the School of Surgeons (Dhanvantari) epitomized the eight main areas of Ayurvedic studies and specialization during ancient times. The details of these eight branches of this natural alternative medicine are present in the three ancient Ayurvedic texts of: Charaka Samhita, Susruta Samhita and Astanga Hridaya. One of the important principle of Ayurveda treatment is that , treatment is given not only to the ailments or the affected part, but to the person as a whole. This creates an enviornment for purifying your body naturally, which eliminates all toxic imbalances from your body, enabling you to regain natural resistance from diseases and attain good health



© 2009 www.ayurvedickerala.com. All rights reserved
 


ayurveda home about us ayurveda ayurveda facilitys ayurveda services location