Listening to Your Body’s Signals

Advanced Ayurveda: Listening to Your Body’s Signals

Adapted from an article by Linda Egenes on May 22, 2020

My Story

When it comes to health, we each have our own unique story to tell.

My personal health journey started at a young age when my parents taught me to eat fresh fruits and vegetables and whole wheat bread, a truly revolutionary idea in the 1960s when Wonder Bread was king. I was rarely sick and only remember going to a doctor twice – once for a bad bout of poison ivy and another time when I stepped on barbed wire and needed a tetanus shot.

So it was a big surprise that as I entered my mid-twenties, I no longer felt so healthy. I suffered from congestion and blocked sinuses every spring, sometimes with a productive cough that would keep me at home for an entire month.

For the first time in my life, I took antibiotics, but eventually the antibiotics didn’t work. Something was clearly out of balance, and I didn’t have a clue how to feel better. And there’s nothing worse than feeling bad and not knowing what’s wrong.

Seasonal Health

Fortunately, I was soon introduced to the practical science of Maharishi AyurVeda.

I learned that spring is the Kapha time of year, when the heavy, cold, sticky qualities of Kapha dosha predominate.

I found that if I cut back on dairy foods – and especially ice cream – I could avoid the build-up of ama, the sticky by-product of undigested food that is the cause of most imbalances. It was incredibly helpful to learn how to adjust my diet with the seasons, and I was amazed at how one simple change solved such a big problem in my life.

Body Type Nutrition

From there I learned about my body type and the specific foods I needed to stay healthy (as opposed to a one-healthy-diet fits-all approach from my childhood).

But more importantly, I also learned to respond directly to my body and its needs.

For instance, if I started to feel congestion coming on when traveling or during times of stress, I immediately reverted to a lighter diet of warm, well-cooked veggies, and pulses (from the legume family) to let my digestion recover.

I learned how to choose foods that would keep my digestion in balance all through the year, so ama wouldn’t accumulate in my body. As I learned more about the seasonal changes that affect us and my innate mind-body tendencies, it was like receiving essential clues to solve my personal health puzzles.

Self Awareness

In other words, by understanding the underlying principles of my own mind-body type and the way emotional, social, and seasonal factors affected me, it became a springboard for my intuition.

I learned to listen to my mind and body in a new way.

You could call this a more advanced approach to Ayurveda. It’s all about developing your inner compass, listening to your body’s signals, and learning how to use food, herbal supplements, and lifestyle choices to restore balance. That may sound difficult to master, but everyone has this innate ability.

Paying Attention

The first step to creating a sustained state of balance is to pay attention to how you feel.

Do you feel better the next morning after eating a light dinner or when you eat a big meal before bed? Do you feel happier the next day when you stay up late or when you go to bed earlier? That’s what finding balance is about – becoming more aware if a certain food or lifestyle choice is nourishing for YOU. Sharpening this kind of self-guidance skill is a powerful companion to following outer rules.

The Ayurvedic Guidelines – Seasonal Tips

The Vata, Pitta and Kapha dietary and lifestyle guidelines—provide helpful hints and, as in my case, provide insight into health imbalances.

Yet there may be times when the dietary guidelines for different doshas can be confusing. For instance, we are all a mixture of doshas, and if you’re a Kapha-Vata, the dietary guidelines for Kapha are exactly opposite to the guidelines for Vata. That can be confusing unless you employ your own self-feedback mechanisms.

Plus our needs change as we experience different seasonal and life cycles. For instance, in my case, I am a Vata-Pitta, but following the Kapha guidelines in spring was the thing that helped me strengthen my upper respiratory system.

New Circumstances

New circumstances are always coming up in our lives that don’t fit the outer rules.

So we need to use the Ayurvedic recommendations to understand what is right for our unique physiology, to decide intuitively what is right for us. Ultimately real understanding comes from the inside. That’s why we’re calling it “Advanced Ayurveda.” It’s not about going by the rules – it’s about applying the rules to your specific mind-body needs. While using the vast body of Ayurvedic knowledge, you’re also going by the inner ruler – your intuition, your own body speaking to you, how you are feeling – and finding solutions. It is a subtle yet effective strategy.

Okay, you may think. This sounds good. But how do you develop your self-referral skills, your inner compass, your intuition? Like a TV screen that is disconnected from power, it’s hard to pick up signals if you’re disconnected from your inner self, or if mind-body coordination is switched off.

Four Simple Steps

Here are four simple steps to reconnect with your inner compass, sharpen your Advanced Ayurveda skills, and restore balance.

1. Establish Healthy Daily Habits

Following simple health habits can bring your mind-body system into balance and help you align with your own nature.

Good sleep, fresh food according to your body type and the seasons, daily exercise, and stress reduction are pillars of Ayurveda. So in this way, the Ayurvedic path to staying in balance is somewhat the same for every person.

Yet the specifics differ according to your mind-body type, the season and climate where you live, and other emotional, social, and environmental influences. Ayurveda recognizes these differences and offers specific guidelines for the three main dosha types. And that is a major tenet of Ayurveda:

There are different remedies for different people. So the daily routine and lifestyle, the type of exercise, the foods you eat—all are slightly different according to your mind-body type.

Check out the Vata, Pitta and Kapha recommendations for helpful insights and tips.

2. Purify Toxins

Toxins in the body, whether from the environment or from digestive impurities (ama), can make you feel sluggish, clouding perceptions and dulling intuition.

Simple Ayurvedic habits such as daily abhyanga (demonstration video on the MAP US site), regular exercise (even walking), seasonal purification procedures, and using the easy to make Digest and Detox tea formula can help clear the mind and body and put you more in touch with your inner resources.

Digest & Detox Tea – mix equal quantities of fennel, cumin and coriander seeds together and put a teaspoon of the mix in a thermos flask with 400ml of boiling water and sip it throughout the day.

Check out this step-by-step detox routine at Maharishi AyurVeda USA for cleansing your body of toxins.

3. Practice Self-pulse Diagnosis

The most powerful and insightful way to determine what you need is pulse diagnosis, called Nadi Vigyan in ancient Ayurvedic texts.

It’s a powerful diagnostic tool to assess the condition of your mind and body and what it requires to achieve a state of balance. It’s also a therapeutic remedy in itself.

By putting your attention on your pulse in a quiet way, it allows your entire mind-body system to settle down and rebalance itself. It’s been called a window into the heart.

If you are interested in learning how to take your own pulse, check out this online course at Maharishi International University.

Tony Nader, M.D., PhD gives an introduction to the technique of Self-Pulse reading as part of an invitation to global group meditation here. For in-depth instruction, check out this online course at Maharishi International University. This course may be available from your local Transcendental Meditation Centre.

4. Meditate Daily

I have found that my daily practice of the Transcendental Meditation technique helps me release stress and become more self-referral, intuitive, and aware.

It helps me stay in tune with my feelings and needs. Plus when I transcend the surface level of thought and experience deep inner bliss, I find myself feeling joy in everything that I do. I find myself spontaneously choosing the foods and behaviours that bring me more happiness.

Whatever your choice of meditation or method, it’s important to find a way to tap into your inner resources. Then by natural desire, by natural inclination, you’ll make choices more in line with your own nature. And over time, as you become more attuned to what a balanced mind and body feels like, it becomes easier and easier to make the right choices, to choose the healthier options to stay in balance.

Thus the Ayurvedic guidelines become easier to follow as you become more attuned to your inner nature. They also help verify that you are going in the right direction.

The Vision of Ayurveda

One of my favorite sections of the Ayurvedic texts gives a sweeping vision of what it means to be in balance.

“For those whose doshas are in balance, whose appetite is good, whose body tissues (dhatus) are functioning normally, whose elimination and other waste removal systems (malas) are in balance and whose body, mind and senses remain full of bliss, they are called a healthy person.” – Sushruta Sutrasthana 15, 41

So let’s remember that the main goal of Ayurveda is to feel balanced, to feel joy. If your intention is to feel bliss, if your intention is to feel good, you will naturally seek out the food and lifestyle choices that make you feel healthy.

With very best wishes for your health and happiness

Linda Egenes writes about green and healthy living and is the author of six books, including Super Healthy Kids: A Parent’s Guide to Maharishi Ayurveda, co-authored with Kumuda Reddy, M.D.


DISCLAIMER: The information in this document is presented for the sole purpose of imparting education on Maharishi AyurVeda and neither the information nor the products are intended to diagnose, treat, mitigate, cure or prevent any disease. If you have a medical condition or are pregnant or lactating, please consult a health professional and it is recommended that you speak with your physician before making significant changes to your diet or routine.