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Ayurvedic Nutrition: Food as Medicine

by Anuradha Gupta, CAP, MBA, YT-200

Pathye sati gadartasya kimaushadhanishevanaih
Pathye-asati gadartasya kimaushadhanishevanaih
— Vaidyajivanam

“With a wholesome diet there is no need for separate medical treatment;
with an unwholesome diet, even treatment becomes questionable.”

Ayurvedic Nutrition: Food as Medicine

Justin is a 14-year-old obese boy who suffers from asthma. His mom is perimenopausal and anemic, while his father has type II diabetes and appears emaciated. As Ayurvedic Practitioners, we know that a vital part of their individualized protocols consists of guidelines on pathya (wholesome and beneficial) ahara (diet) and vihara (lifestyle).

In Ayurveda, food is considered mahabhaisajya, the most superior medicine. This is true for both prevention of disease and disease management. Food is poornabrahma, which satiates the mind, body, and spirit. An important mechanism encompassed within Ayurveda is epigenetics, whereby gene expressions can be upregulated or downregulated as needed to restore balance through proper management of diet, digestion, lifestyle, behavior, stress, and environmental factors. This, in turn, can have a transgenerational impact. 

This approach to healthcare is highly relevant in today’s world where lifestyle-based disorders abound, and we are inundated with processed and convenience food. An apple often costs more than a bag of chips! The following statistics are mind boggling: 

  • According to the WHO (World Health Organization), globally, nearly 1 in 3 people suffer from malnutrition, obesity, and diet- and lifestyle-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs) like type II diabetes, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, stroke, and certain types of cancer.

  • The United Nations has labeled the decade of 2016–25 as the “Decade of Action on Nutrition.”

  • NCDs continue to be the leading cause of death, disability, and lost productivity, responsible for more than half of the global burden of diseases.

  • Those conditions are a major risk factor for communicable diseases like COVID-19.

  • Poor nutrition has become an even bigger health issue than smoking; if people can modify their diets, 1 in 5 deaths can be prevented globally.

  • Six in ten adults in the US suffer from chronic lifestyle-based diseases; 42% are obese and over 70% are overweight.

  • UNICEF has warned that poor diets are significantly harming the health of children globally.

Ayurveda as a lifestyle-based, preventive form of medicine is uniquely poised to provide solutions with its emphasis on diet and lifestyle. In a world widely plagued by an epidemic of stress, a meaningful definition of health must encompass becoming grounded (svastha—being centered and well established in the self) and the three pillars of health, Trayopastambha, which are ahara (a diet that supports physical and mental well-being and faciliates efficient digestion of of the four inputs of life: nutrition, breath, water and liquids, and perception), vihara or brahmacharya (balanced lifestyle in alignment with your higher consciousness and higher purpose) and nidra (sleep).



How is your agni?

The headlines from every magazine scream, “Lose 10 pounds in 2 weeks, try xyz diet or supplement, the ultimate solution to turn your life around.” If these diets, fads, and trends were the answer to nutrition, weight loss, or whatever else is being promised, why haven’t they caused a positive, lasting shift in people’s health? Many people are confused about food, feel guilty, want to lose weight, eat salads indiscriminately, juice for many straight days, subsist on smoothies…and unwittingly commit apathya (unwholesome practices)!

Ayurvedic nutritional concepts are unique for the following reasons:  

  • We are what we digest, not what we eat. Our agni (digestive and metabolic fire) is the key to our well-being—the status of agni is the cornerstone of any Ayurvedic protocol.

  • Nutrition includes food, water and other liquids, breath, and sensory perceptions.

In the context of our mind-body system, food and mental health are inextricably linked. Foods are classified based on the gunas. Foods may be characterized as sattvik (conducive to the clear, light state of the mind associated with a diet of fresh, pure, high prana foods, such as complex whole grains, fruits, and dairy); as rajasic (liable to increase desire and restlessness, as tends to result from eating spicy dishes, garlic, and onion); or as tamasic (apt to cause lethargy and heaviness—a defining quality of processed and stale food and certain meats).

*Practices like meditation improve our our mental and physical health by helping us process perceptions more effectively and helping us make better dietary choices! 

  • Among the three considerations of what, when, and how much we eat, when we eat matters most. Aligning our bodily rhythms with the rhythms of nature is essential. Practicing dinacharya (daily routine) and ritucharya (seasonal transitional routine) guidelines for eating, such as having the heaviest meal at lunchtime when agni is strongest, are tremendously helpful in the optimization of our well-being.

  • The ideal diet is individualized based on our constitution (prakriti) and imbalances (vikruti).

  • Vyadhikshamatwam (immunity) became a buzzword during the pandemic. In particular, yuktikrita bala can be correlated to acquired immunity and is enhanced by a good diet that nourishes dhatus and their net essence, ojas, which lends bala (strength) to the body.

  • Dietary recommendations are based on the shadrasa, or the six tastes. In a state of health, we should favor all six tastes to avoid imbalances or deficiencies, while being mindful to consume more of the tastes that balance our innate constitution.

 

Shadrasa (the six tastes) and their significance in balancing the doshas


My friend loves kidney beans while they make me feel terribly bloated. I do great with rice pudding (kheer), which she cannot stomach!

Just as everything in the universe is composed of the five basic elements (panchamahabhutas) prithvi (earth), apa (water), tejas (fire), vayu (air), and akash (ether); this is true of our bodies and food! Of the three doshas (energy principles), vata, the energy of movement, is composed of ether and air; pitta, the energy of metabolism and transformation, is primarily composed of fire and water; and kapha, the energy of cohesion, structure, and stability, is composed of earth and water. Each of the six tastes comprises a preponderance of certain elements that exert an effect on the doshas and dhatus—pacifying some and aggravating others, according to the principle of “like increases like” and “opposites balance each other!”

This concept can be intuitive. If vata is out of balance with sandhigata vata (osteoarthritis) and particularly with the ruksha guna (dry quality) present, then we know the counterbalance of unctuousness (snigdha guna) is needed to balance those qualities as part of the dietary recommendations or overall chikitsa

To recap, the six tastes with dominating elements are 

  • Madhura (sweet: earth and water), pacifies vata and pitta

  • Amla (sour: earth and fire), pacifies vata

  • Lavana (salty: water and fire), pacifies vata

  • Katu (pungent: fire and air), pacifies kapha

  • Kashaya (astringent: air and earth), pacifies kapha and pitta

  • Tikta (bitter: air and ether), pacifies kapha and pitta


So, what makes a diet pathya, or wholesome? 

A lady with GERD and migraines adds a lot of ginger, garlic, and tomatoes to her food, believing them to have terrific nutritional value. In the summer, she constantly snacks on nuts, has highly aggravated pitta, develops pittaja vidhradhi (boils), and seeks an Ayurvedic consultation. The apathya is very clear. 

A pathya (wholesome and beneficial) diet is tasty, healthy, congenial to the dhatus, srotas, doshas, manas, and chitta and helps prevent vikruti. 

According to the Boston Medical Center, although 45 million Americans are on a diet annually and 50% on crash or fad diets, we are still plagued by an obesity epidemic.

My friend, a dermatologist, is very healthy and pleasant, has wonderful skin and lustrous hair, but has always considered herself overweight. She is kapha through and through, and mamsa-saar, but sadly forever caught up in yo-yo dieting. An Ayurvedic understanding of prakriti has helped her…

 Eight factors determine whether food is wholesome (or unwholesome) as per Charaka Vimanasthana,

  • Prakriti: Nature (rasa, virya, vipaka, prabhava); for example, heavy meats like pork pacify vata (by balancing vata’s inherent lightness)

  • Karana: Processing; churned yogurt becomes takra

  • Samyoga: Combination of foods changes their qualities

  • Rashi: Quantity (even good food in the wrong quantity is harmful)

  • Desha: Habitat and climate

  • Kala: Time; the ripening of fruits can make them sweet instead of astringent; similarly, seasons impact what we should or shouldn’t be eating; for instance, we should avoid consuming foods that are very heating in nature in the summer

  • Upayoga samstha: Rules governing food intake, which include eating warm, unctuous, cooked food, in the proper quantity (eating an anjali of food, with half the amount of space in the stomach for solid food, a quarter of it for liquids, and the remaining quarter should be left empty); eating mindfully, when hungry, well-paced, so you’re not eating too fast or slow, or on the go, washing up before eating, and chanting mantras (offering gratitude) before eating

  • Upayokta: The person who consumes food that is satmya (that they have grown habituated or adapted to, in accordance with what is suitable for their given state and level of health or illness)

 

A 19-year-old with ulcerative colitis has been eating processed food for years; he cleans up his act by skipping lunch, having a chilled protein smoothie in the evening with berries, milk, and a synthetic protein mix, chugging a lot of cold water, and exercising after dinner. He loses weight but develops vicharchika. A year later, many kids in his dorm get gastroenteritis, but his case persists, presenting with atisara (bloody diarrhea), and finally results in a colitis diagnosis. 

Virudhahara: Incompatible combinations. For example, milk and sour fruits are considered incompatible. Ayurveda places a lot of emphasis on avoiding combinations of incompatible foods, as they can generate ama and over time lead to autoimmune conditions. Protein mixes, especially synthetic ones, are heavier to digest, and chilled foods dampen agni. A warm, cooked lunch made with whole foods, would have been better for this youth, and years of consuming processed food were additionally detrimental to his health and well-being. By developing an understanding of the causes of imbalances (nidana parivarjana), we can help to eliminate many simple apathyas we unknowingly commit.

Therapeutic dietary considerations  

Justin’s father has type II diabetes but even without a diagnosis, we do a standardized Ayurvedic assessment. In Ayurveda, there are 20 types of prameha. While we personalize his protocol, in general, laghu, or light ahara, is considered pathya. A proper diet for this case would feature mudga, kulattha, karela, methi, patola, rasona, jambu, amalaki, kharjura, and haridra) while an apathya ahara would include buttermilk, oil, ghee, jaggery, and meat of animals from marshy regions, to name a few.

There are special dietary indications for various types of vikruti, and shamana (pacification through diet, lifestyle, and formulations) or shodhana (cleansing) routes of management. We formulate what Dr. Jayarajan Kodikannath calls the Namaste Protocol—matching the current vyadhi avastha (stage of disease) and stage of samprapti (as determined by assessing the status of agni, ama, and the doshas, dhatus, and srotas) with the recommended chikitsa for samprapti vighatana, or breaking the pathogenesis.

A basic principle would be individualization for rogi and roga. Even if, for example, we advise langhana with fasting for jwara. Besides yukti (our logic), we are blessed with aptopadesha like Sushruta’s Dvadasha Ashana Vichara for formulating a diet beyond the samanya or normal diet advised for healthy people. For instance, ahara with ushna guna, heating potency, is advised during shodhana and for vata-kapha vikruti. Shita guna, cooling potency, is appropriate for those who have burning or daha, alcoholism, emaciation, or pitta vikruti. 

 

Ayurveda: Comparisons and Myths

  1. Traditional Diets. Similar to Ayurvedic diets in many ways, these diets orginate from a region or ethnicity asociated with great health and longevity and include the Mediterranean (considered anti-inflammatory), Nordic, West African, rural Japanese, French Paradox, and Blue Zone diets. The food is fresh and not processed, local, and seasonal, favoring whole grains, beans, fruits and vegetables, fish, lean meats, and healthy fats; major drinks are water, tea, and some fermented and wine preparations. These diets are satmya to the population and easily digested! Portion sizes are smaller and meals are a community event. Active lifestyles that involve regular exercise are the norm in regions associated with these diets.

     

  2. Food Based Dietary Guidelines. Over 100 nations have developed food based dietary guidelines (FBDG) like the food pyramid in the U.S., and they now include holistic, lifestyle-based suggestions, urging a balanced diet, less salt, fat, and sugar, more fruits, and vegetables, moderating alcohol, and reducing red/processed meat. Swedish and German dietary guidelines advise less meat because of its environmental impact; some guidelines address sustainability as we realize the impact we are having on nature; our sustained adharma, which is a major factor in climate change and janapadodhwamsa vyadhis like COVID-19 and Monkeypox. 

     

  3. Other dietary trends. My friend’s son was medically advised to eat a keto diet to help manage his epilepsy, and it was carefully monitored. Rosie O’Donnell had a heart attack and opted for weight loss surgery; a pre-diabetic Janet Jackson chose Nutrisystem.

 

Some diets and cleanses are healthy and medically prescribed. Certain diets recommend specific nutrients or certain types of food, smaller portion sizes, and lifestyle changes like exercise. As Ayurvedic professionals, we honor and incorporate all dietary goals. including a quest for weight loss, where Ayurveda is very effective. But we need to be wary of media-driven trends like the latest detox and cleanse diets, the distortion of healthy standards by advertising’s and social media’s glorification of being thin regardless of your natural constitution, and risky fads like the sleeping beauty diet (sleeping to avoid eating) and the cotton ball diet (eating cotton balls dipped in juice or smoothies to manage hunger). Such practices and beliefs can be outright dangerous. Ayurveda recommends that diets be individualized to a person’s prakriti or vikruti and that they be holistic (attuned to mental as well as physical health) and sustainable.

 

Addressing Common Myths

Ayurvedic food does not have to be Indian, costly, or vegetarian. Charaka Samhita lists 8 types of meats and their properties. And any type of cuisine can be understood from the perspective of shadrasa and the basic principles of Ayurvedic nutrition.

 

Our quest as Ayurvedic Practitioners is to live life to our fullest potential and encourage our rogis to do so as well. How do we nurture ourselves? What dietary changes can we make in our lives to align with our practice? 


Ayurveda NAMA nutrition

About the Author

Anuradha Gupta is an MBA, Engineer, Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner, YT-200, and AD student at Kerala Ayurveda. She writes for Kerala Ayurveda, Art of Living, and Sri Sri Tattva and volunteers extensively. You can find her on Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn.

The Dangers of Self-Medicating with Herbs

ayurveda herbs

by Manju Kolli

Before I had the joy of becoming an Ayurvedic Practitioner, I trained and served as a clinical pharmacist. My experience in pharmacy, spanning more than 15 years, has both informed and enriched my perspective on the Ayurvedic practice I have built.   

As a pharmacist, one of the most alarming and challenging trends I have witnessed is the surge in sales of over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, particularly those designed to alleviate symptoms of a range of increasingly common chronic illnesses. The growing use of OTC medications has been further fueled by their affordability, as well as by a rise in the number of prescription drugs that are now available over the counter.   

Abuse and overuse of OTC medications can have serious consequences. The dangers from misuse of certain OTC painkillers, cough medicines, antihistamines, antacids, and laxatives, for example, are well documented within the medical community, and there is growing public awareness of the perils as well. 

We are now seeing rising sales of herbal supplements, the market for which is currently valued in the multibillion dollar range and continuing to grow as increasing numbers of consumers seek natural remedies, both to prevent disease and to address chronic conditions. Additionally, the COVID-19 crisis is prompting many wellness consumers to look to supplements, including herbs, to boost their immune system.

Given my overlapping backgrounds in pharmacy and Ayurveda, I am acutely aware of the dangers of potential misuse of herbal supplements by consumers who may be self-medicating. This concern is shared by Ayurvedic and allopathic doctors alike. A friend who is a nephrologist even made a personal appeal to me to help save people’s kidneys by warning them of the dangers that lie in the misuse of herbal supplements.

The Science of Herbs

Although those of Indian origin tend to see Ayurveda as grandma’s wisdom-infused medicine, the reality is that Ayurveda is highly scientific in its approach to health and wellness. The well-developed rationales and principles underlying this approach and the logical treatment protocols it comprises have withstood the test of time. 

Foundational to Ayurveda is the understanding that we all have a distinct blueprint at birth. As we mature, age, and go through life’s varied experiences and challenges, the natural balance of our original constitution (prakruti) changes and can be pushed out of balance. This imbalanced state (vikruti) is heavily influenced by our dietary and lifestyle choices. 

Since a person responds to external triggers according to their particular prakruti, one person’s medicine can be another’s poison. This insight is true for most herbs just as it is true for most drugs.

Also essential to the proper use of herbs is a clear understanding of the Ayurvedic principle Karya Karana Bhava, which holds that no event occurs in creation without a cause. Simply put, there is a cause behind each and every disease. Ayurveda’s wisdom is used to address that cause in order to maintain health, prevent disease, and restore balance. 

Let us look at the common problem of indigestion. One study cited by the National Institute of Health estimates that one in four Americans suffers from it. 

There are many causes of indigestion. I have grouped together some common causes according to the dosha they can aggravate:

  1. Excessive or high-impact physical activity or insufficient food consumption, aggravating vata

  2. Spicy, salty, or sour foods, or excessive anger, aggravating pitta

  3. An extremely sedentary lifestyle or consumption of too many sweet and heavy foods, aggravating kapha 

Trikatu (which comprises dry ginger, black pepper, and pippali) can be very helpful in curing indigestion, as well as the bloating it can cause; however, it is only truly applicable to one of the three scenarios listed above.

In the first scenario, indigestion is likely to have resulted from insufficient digestive fire because of a loss of tissue strength, with the influence of vata’s predominantly dry and light properties. Trikatu will increase these depleting qualities, due to its own inherent dry and light properties, which, in turn, will aggravate the indigestion.

In the second scenario, indigestion results from excessive pitta, and trikatu will likewise aggravate indigestion and pitta due to its hot potency.

In the third scenario, however, trikatu is indicated as an appropriate pacifying remedy. 

Here are some other examples of commonly available herbs that are subject to misuse: 

Tulsi is known for helping with cold and cough symptoms. If, however, a cough is due to depletion, and it is dry, tulsi will increase the dryness and depletion and could aggravate the cough.

Ashwagandha is frequently used to treat depression, help with fertility, and increase muscle mass. If a client’s symptoms are due to excess accumulation of ama (undigested food in the body), however, ashwagandha will only worsen the condition. 

Triphala is definitely an amazingly versatile herbal medicine that can help in many scenarios, but long-term use of it can create a harmful dryness in mucosal linings. 

Neem can help with diabetes by removing excess accumulation of mucus. Yet if neem is overused after it achieves the desired action, vata gets aggravated, creating an imbalance.

Even ghee, one of the most widely advocated superfoods in Ayurveda, can be misused. If a person is suffering from insufficient digestive fire (mandagni) and excessive mucus, ghee can further dampen digestion and exacerbate the problem. 

These are but a few examples of why it is essential to understand the nature of both the prakruti and the vikruti of clients, as well as the pathological road map of their disease manifestation, before prescribing herbal treatments. It is also important to use the optimal delivery method, including the Karya Karana Bhava, that will efficiently and effectively deliver the right herb to the right site and body system. 

As these examples illustrate, well-meaning friends can naively advocate for an herb that has worked very well for them but can be harmful for someone else. In contrast, a knowledgeable Ayurvedic Practitioner can help clients find and correctly use herbal supplements that are right for them.

Our Role in Educating the Public

As Ayurvedic Practitioners, we play a critical role in protecting public health. Here are three suggestions for increasing awareness of the benefits of herbal supplements and the dangers of self-medicating:

  1. Ask your clients to reach out to you with any questions rather than try to self-medicate based on advice from friends or information they find on the internet.

  2. Offer free talks in public venues, such as virtual or live forums hosted by local libraries.

  3. Author articles for local newspapers to educate your community.

The increasing popularity of herbal supplements and remedies represents a potential turning point in public awareness and medical community acceptance of Ayurveda as a credible pathway to health and wellness. It is up to us as practitioners and students of Ayurveda to help people understand that herbs and herbal supplements must be used appropriately.


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About the Author

Manju Kolli is an Ayurvedic Practitioner based in California’s Bay Area, where she is the founding director of Ayurhitam, an Ayurvedic wellness clinic. Manju has more than 15 years of experience serving as an allopathic clinical pharmacist at the long-term care pharmacy PharMerica. A NAMA-recognized Ayurvedic Practitioner, she also teaches Ayurveda and has expertise in women’s and children’s health, gut problems, skin conditions, mental health, and allergies.

How Applying Ayurvedic Therapeutic Practices in Working with Addiction

By Jessica Ferrol, AD, MHC, CYT, PKS

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that at least 72,000 Americans died from drug overdoses in 2017. This number does not include people who died from conditions related to alcohol or cigarettes. The same source asserts that 480,000 Americans die each year from smoking-related illness alone. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism estimates that 88,000 die from alcohol- related conditions. It is not known how many Americans suffer from some form of addiction, but these statistics reveal a frightening reality.

Addiction is a disease without a specific cure. Treatment involves managed care. Substance abuse ranks as a leading cause of sickness and death, and addiction itself is now recognized as a chronic disease that causes long-term changes in neuronal activity patterns.

Most addictive substances cause the brain to release hormones that elicit a feeling of pleasure and, at high doses, euphoria. Addiction occurs when an individual has abused a substance or substances to the point that the brain loses the capacity to naturally generate pleasure hormones, leaving the individual to rely on one or more substances to achieve a feeling of normalcy. In fact, nothing about an addicted brain is normal.

Āyurveda, as a holistic healthcare system, provides a complete maintenance approach to supporting sobriety with daily self-care practices and routines that promote physical rejuvenation and mental well-being and restore a normal physical state over time. Āyurvedic theory states that all humans naturally experience kama (“the desire for pleasure”) and that this longing and the wish to avoid pain are basic survival instincts shared by all organisms. Āyurveda also asserts that the attachment to pleasure and the avoidance of pain can lead to disease if pursued at any cost. Addiction is a case in point: The addict will sacrifice nearly everything to feel a high. In the deepest throes of addiction, the addict will sustain a dangerous lifestyle simply to find a feeling of normalcy.

The Āyurvedic practitioner may use the conceptual theory of the five sheaths as a foundation for treatment of addiction. The theoretical understanding of the five sheaths provides a map of how to access body (annamaya kosha), breath (pranamaya kosha), mind (manomaya kosha), intelligence (vijnamaya kosha) and consciousness (anandamaya kosha) as well a way to understand how these parts are connected or can become disconnected.   

Addiction is a disease that takes residence in the body, breath, and mind sheaths and creates a disconnect from the intelligence and consciousness sheaths. Disconnection from intelligence results in an inability to discern reality from illusion, causing the mind to become flooded by irrational, obsessive thoughts. These negatively affect the movement of breath and create a state of hyperarousal (“heightened anxiety, fear, or anger and increased sensitivity to stimuli”) or hypoarousal (a feeling of depression, lethargy, or paralysis) in the physical body.

The addict hopes to achieve a feeling of normalcy by using a drug. In fact, the drug is dangerous, and it works against this end. When the short-term effect of the drug goes away, the addicted mind is once again overwhelmed with irrational, obsessive thoughts. It is in a physically worsened condition, and the cycle of substance abuse begins again. Addicts might instead employ Āyurvedic practices, which may bring stability to the mind and return the body to a well-regulated state.  Over time, these practices may re-establish access to innate intelligence. Connection to innate intelligence is crucial to relapse prevention. 

Proper diet, adequate sleep, and a healthy sensory environment will help minimize cravings. A safe environment is essential in order to deny access to substances that can be abused. Herbs will support the body in detoxifying while also sedating the nervous system. The overall goal is to guide clients to re-inhabit their body, to return home. By cultivating awareness and sensory connection to the physical body, the addicted client ignites activity in the root chakra and circulates a feeling of safety and stability through the mind. This in turn sets the stage for cellular repair to heal the body.

Restoration of the breath involves recovery of the natural, instinctual breath through meditative practices. Life events that are stored as implicit memory affect the natural depth of inhalation and the natural length of exhalation. Recovery of full inhale and full exhale through gentle breathing exercises creates a state of equilibrium in the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems, generating an overall feeling of regulation in the mind and body.

The practitioner must guide the addicted client to the sensation of body through yoga asanas or meditative practices. This will slow the thought process and calm the mind. Trauma often accompanies addiction. Āyurvedic practitioners should be careful not to trigger the client while navigating the terrain of the mind. It might, therefore, be helpful to support this process with one-on-one therapy as well as group therapy, guided by trained mental health counselors.

The following is a method of healing that works with body, breath, and mind: 

Come into a comfortable position that feels supportive for your spine. Feel yourself intentionally withdraw your awareness from the outer environment into the inner terrain. Drop into the body through the breath. Track the movement of breath by feeling the air draw deeply into the nostrils, and follow it to the very end of the exhale. As the body drinks in the air, notice the physical feeling of needs being met. Invite the emotional heart to take in what it needs with the movement of incoming breath. Notice how your body responds to the words “I have all I need in this moment.”  Then, turn your awareness to the sensation of letting go that is present in every exhale. Invite the emotional heart to release that which it no longer needs with the movement of outgoing breath. Notice how the body responds to the words “I belong.”  Make a note of how your body feels at this moment. As you slowly turn your awareness back toward outer environment, stay in contact with inner body sensation. See if you can maintain awareness of inner sensation while you engage with the world around you.


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jessica Ferrol, AD, MHC, CYT, PKS is an Ayurvedic Doctor, Holistic Mental Health Counselor, Herbalist and Certified Yoga Teacher.  She incorporates Ayurvedic practices and psychosomatic therapy in her private practice and an addiction treatment facility.  The purpose of her work is to rekindle the connection to one’s inner source of wisdom.