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				<font color="#000000">Living a life of balance, an introduction 
				to Ayurvedic Medicine.<span style="font-weight: 400"><br>
				<br>
				Excerpted from Dr. Aruna Bakhru's upcoming book entitled &quot;The 
				Guru Principle&quot;<br>
				<br>
				Ayurveda is an ancient and holistic system of medicine, which 
				originated in India more than five thousand years ago. The word 
				Ayu means life (span) and Veda means knowledge i.e. knowledge of 
				life or the science of life. One of the basic tenets of Ayurveda 
				is that life is meant to be lived in balance and in harmony with 
				nature. Illness happens when we move away from a life of balance 
				to excesses or deficiencies of any kind, whether it is the way 
				we eat, sleep, work, exercise, think or feel. Ayurveda believes 
				that one has to live in harmony with the seasons, the time of 
				day, the place you live etc. <br>
				<br>
				According to Ayurveda, people are divided into different body 
				types and if you follow the diet, purification routines, 
				exercises, etc. specific for your body type you can correct many 
				of the problems you may be suffering from.<br>
				<br>
				Ayurveda places a great deal of emphasis on the mind. According 
				to Ayurveda many of our physical problems and imbalances are 
				first created in the mind. Unlike western medicine, which has 
				divorced the mind from the body, Ayurveda says they are 
				seamlessly connected and each affects the other. The place where 
				the mind and the body connect is the place where matter 
				interfaces with energy.<br>
				<br>
				The three Doshas of Ayurveda:<br>
				<br>
				According to Ayurveda, the doshas lie at the place where the 
				mind connects with the body. If the mind and the body are not 
				coordinated, an imbalance is created in the Doshas.<br>
				<br>
				There are three Doshas and they are as follows:</span></font><blockquote>
					<p><font color="#000000"><span style="font-weight: 400">1. 
					Vata corresponds to Air.<br>
					2. Pitta corresponds to fire.<br>
					3. Kapha corresponds to water.</span></font></p>
				</blockquote>
				<p><font color="#000000"><span style="font-weight: 400">Each and 
				every person has all the three doshas or principles to varying 
				degrees, but usually one or other is dominant. i.e. if you are a 
				Vata type then the Vata principle is dominant. This is important 
				because your body type governs how you should live and what you 
				should eat to maintain a life of balance.<br>
				<br>
				</span>Vata Dosha:<span style="font-weight: 400"><br>
				<br>
				Corresponds to air, ether.<br>
				Function is movement, breathing, and circulation.<br>
				Emotions are fear, anxiety, and pain.<br>
				Seat of Vata is in the colon, pelvis etc.<br>
				The Vata constitution is thin, tall or too short, bony joints, 
				thin eyelashes, sunken eyes, bent nose, variable appetite, tends 
				to constipation, poor sleep, creative, restless, alert, poor 
				willpower and tolerance. Cold hands and feet.<br>
				<br>
				</span>Pitta Dosha:<span style="font-weight: 400"><br>
				<br>
				Corresponds to fire and water.<br>
				Function is metabolism, digestion, absorption and assimilation.<br>
				Emotions are anger, hatred and jealousy. <br>
				Seat of Pitta is stomach, small intestine and blood.<br>
				Pitta Constitution is medium build, premature graying, medium 
				sleep, warm hands and feet, short tempered, intelligent and 
				ambitious.<br>
				<br>
				</span>Kapha Dosha:<span style="font-weight: 400"><br>
				<br>
				Corresponds to water and the earth.<br>
				Function is that of cementing material of the body, connective 
				tissue, joint lubrication, and memory retention.<br>
				Emotions are greed, attachment, envy, forgiveness, calmness and 
				maternal emotions.<br>
				<br>
				Seat of Kapha is chest, sinuses, ears, nose, throat area, joints 
				etc. <br>
				Kapha constitution is solid build, slow, deliberate, good 
				strength and endurance, prolonged sleep, obese, calm, forgiving, 
				loving, greedy and possessive. They are slow to grasp 
				information but once they do they retain it i.e. good memory 
				retention. <br>
				<br>
				According to Ayurveda, the imbalance or disease may originate in 
				the mind in the form of some negative emotion, which affects the 
				doshas, and in turn the body or, it may originate in the body 
				and then affect the mind. Diet and environment are the key 
				causes here affecting the doshas, which in turn can affect the 
				mind. We saw earlier that Vata is connected to fear and anxiety, 
				Pitta to hate and jealousy and Kapha to greed and 
				possessiveness. <br>
				<br>
				Western medical science has not recognized the importance of the 
				relationship between the immune system and the gut. Only now are 
				some people beginning to recognize and label the &quot;leaky gut 
				syndrome&quot; as being the cause of many diseases. Ayurveda 
				recognized this connection five thousand years ago when it 
				talked about disease being caused by accumulation of toxins or &quot;ama&quot; 
				as a result of impairment of the &quot;Agni&quot; (the process of 
				digestion and assimilation). If the agni does not function 
				properly, then the ama accumulates in the intestines and leaks 
				into the circulation and subsequently accumulates in other parts 
				of the body clogging them, impairing their resistance and 
				immunity and causing disease of that organ. <br>
				<br>
				Imbalanced emotions also cause disease by impairing the agni and 
				therefore the immune system. In the Bhagwad Gita, the Lord tells 
				Arjuna that He Himself has become the digestive fire or Agni in 
				the human body, serving to illustrate the importance of agni. 
				I.e. it is the Lord's energy, which is powering the digestive 
				system and thus all the metabolic processes and also 
				strengthening the immune system. Disrespect of your digestive 
				fire by eating the wrong foods or an imbalanced lifestyle is 
				disrespecting the Lord within you and inviting disease.<br>
				<br>
				The Ayurvedic physician usually performs a detailed history and 
				physical examination. The examination includes but is not 
				limited to pulse diagnosis, examination of the tongue, facial 
				diagnosis including the lines and wrinkles of your face, your 
				lips, eyes. Examination of the nails and hair, examination of 
				the urine, feces, sweat etc. examination of the mind and 
				emotions. He may also check your astrological chart as this may 
				predict disease proneness. Modern medicine treats the body as 
				though it is a machine with various parts and each part is 
				treated by a different specialist. The problem with a machine is 
				that you can repair it with spare parts. The human body on the 
				other hand functions as a whole. An Ayurvedic physician tries to 
				assist the body in its attempt to repair itself. <br>
				<br>
				Treatment in Ayurveda consists of: Panchakarma (purification or 
				cleansing of the body), herbs, yoga, mantras, gemstones, color 
				therapy, sound therapy using classical ragas, dietary 
				manipulation to balance the doshas, fasting, meditation etc. 
				Treatment is individualized to the person and not the disease. 
				Whereas in allopathic medicine, two patients with arthritis will 
				usually get the same treatment, its not so in Ayurveda. <br>
				<br>
				Panchakarma is employed to eliminate toxins from the body. 
				Massages using oil and herbs, enemas, nasal purgation and 
				induced vomiting are some of the methods used. I remember as a 
				child being taken by my parents for treatment to a local 
				Ayurveda center and the doctors there would make me drink tons 
				of water then come up from behind and press my upper abdomen and 
				all the water would come out. Although disconcerting at first, I 
				did feel really cleaned out afterwards. However, do not try this 
				at home. It can only be done under the supervision of an 
				Ayurvedic physician. Oil or water enemas are used depending on 
				the imbalance present. I would not recommend getting treatment 
				from someone who has taken a two month crash course in Ayurveda. 
				These people can do more harm than good. The idea behind 
				panchakarma is to open the channels and begin getting rid of the 
				accumulated toxins. It can be very effective in getting rid of 
				the chemicals that we are polluting our bodies (and our planet) 
				with, in our so-called modern society.<br>
				<br>
				In Ayurveda, the underlying philosophy is a reverence for all 
				life. Therefore herbs are grown, cultivated and harvested with 
				respect, reverence and purity in mind with the result that the 
				healing effects of such herbs are powerful and in tune with 
				nature. Remember the four sheaths that cover the soul. According 
				to Ayurveda each sheath can be healed with different methods. 
				The physical body can be healed by a vata, pitta or kapha 
				pacifying diet, herbal treatment and yogic exercises. The astral 
				body by the use of herbs, pranayama, color, sound, gemstones 
				magnets (and homeopathy works at this level also). Mantras and 
				meditation reach the causal body. Remember the Yamas and Niyamas 
				mentioned in an earlier chapter, they also form a part of 
				Ayurvedic healing because a person cannot be completely healed 
				unless he lives a life of righteousness including cleanliness of 
				the body as well as the mind. Therefore your behavior also 
				affects your health whether you like it or not. I am not just 
				talking about smoking, drinking, drugs etc., which have obvious 
				health consequences but also behaviors that are motivated by 
				greed for example or selfishness, jealousy etc. The in dwelling 
				Lord sees and makes note of everything. There are people who are 
				motivated by wrong desires but they bamboozle those around them 
				into thinking that their motives are pure. The inner soul, which 
				is the same indweller in all, knows. You cannot fool Him. That 
				is why Ayurveda places a lot of emphasis on inner purity. A lot 
				of illnesses are first created in the mind. We are not victims 
				of some random event. Everything has a reason, a lesson, perhaps 
				a teaching.<br>
				<br>
				Ayurveda also consults a person&#8217;s astrological chart for 
				indications regarding tendencies to certain diseases, timing, 
				karmic burdens etc. sometimes certain prayers can be said to 
				mitigate otherwise incurable illnesses.</span></font></p>
				<blockquote>
					<blockquote>
						<p><font color="#000000"><span style="font-weight: 400">
						<i>The body, not the Self, is touched<br>
						O Arjuna! By cold and heat, -<br>
						By pleasure and by pain besmirched:<br>
						They come and go! Endure and greet<br>
						Them, Bharata! So be thou brave<br>
						And know thou this, O prince of men!<br>
						Whoso to these is not a slave<br>
						Is an immortal citizen!</i><br>
						The Gita by T.L. Vaswani</span></font><br>
						<br></p>
					</blockquote>
				</blockquote>
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			For re-print information and permission please contact:<br>
			<b><a href="http://www.thecenterforenergymedicine.com/contact_us/">
			Aruna Bakhru M.D.</a></b></td>
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