Ayurveda :
A Brief History
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Ayurveda
is the oldest surviving complete
medical system in the world. Derived
from its ancient Sanskrit roots - ‘ayus'
(life) and ‘ved' (knowledge)
– and offering a rich, comprehensive
outlook to a healthy life, its
origins go back nearly 5000 years.
To when it was expounded and
practiced by the same spiritual
rishis, who laid the foundations
of the Vedic civilisation in
India, by organising the
fundamentals of life into proper
systems.
The main source of
knowledge in this field therefore
remain the Vedas, the divine
books of knowledge they propounded,
and more specifically the fourth of
the series, namely Atharvaveda
that dates back to around 1000 BC.
Of the few other treatises on
Ayurveda that have survived from
around the same time, the most
famous are Charaka Samhita
and the Sushruta Samhita
which concentrate on internal
medicine and surgery respectively.
The Astanga Hridayam is a
more concise compilation of earlier
texts that was created about a
thousand years ago. These between
them forming a greater part of the
knowledge base on Ayurveda as
it is practiced today.
The art of
Ayurveda had spread around in
the 6th century BC to Tibet, China,
Mongolia, Korea and Sri Lanka,
carried over by the Buddhist monks
travelling to those lands. Although
not much of it survives in original
form, its effects can be seen in the
various new age concepts that have
originated from there.
No philosophy has had
greater influence on Ayurveda
than Sankhaya’s philosophy of
creation and manifestation. Which
professes that behind all creation
there is a state of pure existence
or awareness, which is beyond time
and space, has no beginning or end,
and no qualities. Within pure
existence, there arises a desire to
experience itself, which results in
disequilibrium and causes the
manifestation of the primordial
physical energy. And the two unite
to make the "dance of creation" come
alive.
Imponderable,
indescribable and extremely subtle,
this primordial energy – which and
all that flows from it existing only
in pure existence – is the creative
force of all action, a source of
form that has qualities. Matter and
energy are so closely related that
when energy takes form, we tend to
think of it in terms of matter only.
And much modified, it ultimately
leads to the manifestation of our
familiar mental and physical worlds.
It also gives rise to
cosmic consciousness, which is the
universal order that prevades all
life. Individual intelligence, as
distinct from the everyday
intellectual mind, is derived from
and is part of this consciousness.
It is the inner wisdom, the part of
individuality that remains unswayed
by the demands of daily life, or by
Ahamkara, the sense of `I-ness’.
A Sanskrit word with
no exact translation, Ahamkara,
is a concept not quite understood by
everyone as it is often misleadingly
equated to `ego’. Embracing much
more than just that, it is in
essence that part of ‘me’ which
knows which parts of the universal
creation are ‘me’. Since ‘I’ am not
separate from the universal
consciousness, but ‘I’ has an
identity that differentiates and
defines the boundaries of `me’. All
creations therefore have Ahamkara,
not just human beings.
There arises from
Ahamkara a two-fold creation.
The first is Satwa, the
subjective world, which is able to
perceive and manipulate matter. It
comprises the subtle body (the
mind), the capacity of the five
sense organs to hear, feel, see,
taste and smell, and for the five
organs of action to speak, grasp,
move, procreate and excrete. The
mind and the subtle organs providing
the bridge between the body, the
Ahamkara and the inner wisdom,
which three together is considered
the essential nature of humans.
The second is
Tamas, the objective world of
the five elements of sound, touch,
vision, taste and smell – the five
subtle elements that give rise to
the dense elements of ether or
space, air, fire, water and the
earth – from which all matter of the
physical world is derived. And it is
Rajas, the force or the
energy of movement, which brings
together parts of these two worlds.
Dense Element
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Subtle Element
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Sense Organ
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Motor Organ
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Function
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Space |
Sound |
Ears |
Vocal
Chords |
Speaking |
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Air |
Touch |
Skin |
Hands |
Grasping |
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Fire |
Sight |
Eyes |
Feet |
Moving |
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Water |
Taste |
Tongue |
Genitals |
Procreating |
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Earth |
Smell |
Nose |
Anus |
Excreting |
It is worth noting
that even at the stage of the dense
elements the philosophy of creation
–which according to Sankaya
is now and in the present, without
any past and any future – is still
dealing with aspects of existence
beyond our simple physical realms.
The point of contention being that
we are the first and foremost spirit
experiencing existence. To use
Ayurveda in daily life, one has
neither to accept nor even
understand this philosophy. But it
does provide a deeper insight into
how Ayurveda works towards
betterment of your health.
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Ayurveda
therefore is not simply a
health care system but a
form of lifestyle adopted to
maintain perfect balance and
harmony within the human
existence, from the most
abstract transcendental
values to the most concrete
physiological expressions.
Based on the premise that
life represents an
intelligent co-ordination of
the Atma (Soul),
Mana (Mind), Indriya
(Senses) and Sharira
(Body).
That revolves around the
five dense elements that go
into the making of the
constitution of each
individual, called
Prakriti.
Which in turn is determined
by the vital balance of the
three physical energies -
Vata,
Pitta,
Kapha
and the three mental
energies - Satwa, Rajas,
Tamas. |

The Hindu God
of creation revealed the
science of ayurveda to the
sage Atreya
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Ayurveda
thus offers a unique blend of
science and philosophy that balances
the physical, mental, emotional and
spiritual components necessary for
holistic health. |
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Principles
of Ayurveda
Introduction
According to ayurvedic
philosophy an individual bundle of `spirit’,
desirious of expressing itself, uses
subjective consciousness or Satwa to
manifest sense organs and a mind. Spirit and
mind then project themselves into a physical
body, created from the five (Pancha)
great (maha) eternal elements (bhutas)
– together called the Panchamahabhutas
– which arise from Tamas. The sense
organs then using Rajas to project
from the body into the external world to
experience their objects. The body becoming
the mind’s vehicle, its physical instrument
for sense gratification.
The Bhutas combine
into "tridoshas" or bioenergetic
forces that govern and determine our health
or physical condition. While the three
gunas (Rajas or activity,
Tamas or inertia and Satwa, which
balances the first two) or psychic forces
determine our mental and spiritual health.
Ayurveda is thus a holistic system of
health care that teaches us to balance these
energies in order to achieve optimum health
and well being. |
The Panchamahabhutas
According to Ayurveda everything in life is
composed of the Panchamahabhutas – Akash
(Space), Vayu (Air), Jal (Water), Agni
(Fire) and Prithvi (Earth). Omnipresent, they are
mixed in an infinite variety of relative proportions
such that each form of matter is distinctly unique.
Although each element has a range of attributes, only
some get evident in particular situations. Constantly
changing and interacting with each other, they create a
situation of dynamic flux that keeps the world going.
Within a simple, single living cell for example
the earth element predominates by giving structure to
the cell. The water element is present in the cytoplasm
or the liquid within the cell membrane. The fire element
regulates the metabolic processes regulating the cell.
While the air element predominates the gases therein.
The space occupied by the cell denoting the last of the
elements.
In the case of a complex, multi-cellular organism
as a human being for instance, akash corresponds
to spaces within the body (mouth, nostrils, abdomen
etc.); vayu denotes the movement (essentially
muscular); agni controls the functioning of
enzymes (intelligence, digestive system, metabolism);
jal is in all body fluids (as plasma, saliva,
digestive juices); and prithvi manifests itself
in the solid structure of the body (bones, teeth, flesh,
hair et al).
The Panchmahabhutas therefore serve as the
foundation of all diagnosis & treatment modalities in
Ayurveda and has served as a most valuable theory for
physicians to detect and treat illness of the body and
mind successfully.


The Tridoshas
The Tridoshas (tri meaning three
and doshas being the basic physical energies) are
the primary and essential factors of the human body that
govern our entire physical structure and function.
Derived from the Panchmahabhutas, each dosha
– which like the elements cannot be detected with our
senses but their qualities can be – is a combination of
any two of the five bhutas with the predominance
of one. Called
Vata,
Pitta and
Kapha in Sanskrit, these three are responsible for all the physiological
and psychological processes within the body and mind –
dynamic forces that determine growth and decay. Every
physical characteristic, mental capacity and the
emotional tendency of a human being can therefore be
explained in terms of the tridoshas.
Most of the physical phenomena ascribed to the
nervous system by modern physiology for example, can be
identified with
Vata.
Just as the entire chemical process operating in the
human body can be attributed to
Pitta,
including enzymes, hormones and the complete nutritional
system. And the activities of the skeletal and the
anabolic system, actually the entire physical volume of
an organism, can be considered as Kapha.

Each dosha thus shares a quality with
another (although there remain slight differences in the
nature of shared quality), the third having just the
opposite quality. Also, each has an inherent ability to
regulate and balance itself, coming from the
antagonistic qualities that arise from the doshas
constituent elements.
When the doshas are in balance i.e. in a state of
equilibrium, we remain healthy. As Charaka, the
great ayurvedic sage, explained: "Vata, pitta and kapha maintain the integrity of the living human organism in their
normal state and combine so as to make the man a
complete being with his indriyas (sense organs)
possessed of strength, good complexion and assured of
longevity." It is only when that there is imbalance
within the three that disease is caused. And since it is
the strongest dosha in the constitution that
usually has the greatest tendency to increase, one is
most susceptible to illnesses associated with an
increase of the same.
It is important to realise that these three are
forces and not substances.
Kapha is not mucus; it is the force that causes mucus to arise.
Similarly
pitta
is not bile; but that which causes bile to be produced.
And they are called doshas – literally meaning
`faults’ or `out of whack’- as they indicate the fault
lines along which the system can become imbalanced.
It is equally important to understand that the
three doshas within any person keep changing
constantly, due to the doshic qualities of specific
lifestyle and environment, such as time and season. And
that these three are not separate energies but different
aspects of the same energy, present together in an
infinite variety of combinations, wherein their
qualities overlap and interrelate.
Ayurveda however considers only three types of
constitution – in monotypes just one dosha
predominates, in duo types two have near similar
strength, and in the very rarely found third type all
three are equally powerful. Within this broad
classification, there are in the first category various
sub-types that are listed below for easier reference.
The Trigunas
Just as the doshas are the essential
components of the body, the three gunas -
Satwa, Rajas and Tamas - are the three
essential components or energies of the mind. Ayurveda
provides a distinct description of people on the basis
of their Manasa (psychological) Prakriti
(constitution). Genetically determined, these
psychological characteristics are dependent on the
relative dominance of the three gunas.
While all individuals have mixed amounts of the
three, the predominant guna determines an
individual's mansa prakriti. In equilibrium, the
three gunas preserve the mind (and indirectly the
body), maintaining it in a healthy state. Any
disturbance in this equilibrium results in various types
of mental disorders.
Satwa, characterised by lightness,
consciousness, pleasure and clarity, is pure, free from
disease and cannot be disturbed in any way. It activates
the senses and is responsible for the perception of
knowledge. Rajas, the most active of the gunas,
has motion and stimulation as its characteristics. All
desires, wishes, ambitions and fickle-mindedness are a
result of the same. While Tamas is characterised
by heaviness and resistance. It produces disturbances in
the process of perception and activities of the mind.
Delusion, false knowledge, laziness, apathy, sleep and
drowsiness are due to it.
Rajas and Tamas, as with the doshas,
can be unbalanced by stress and negative desires as
kama (lust), irshya (malice), moha
(delusion and halucination), lobha (greed),
chinta (anxiety), bhaya (fear) and krodha
(anger). Each of these three properties is also
comprised of sub-types and the particular sub-type to
which one belongs to determine the qualities of that
individual.
Satwika individuals are usually noble and spiritual in character, their
nature determined as much by body type as their star
constellation, having an element of
kapha
in their constitution.
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Satwika Subtype Qualities |
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Brahma |
Free from passion, anger, greed, ignorance or jealousy,
possessing knowledge and the power of
discrimination. |
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Arsa |
Excellent memory, purity, love and self -control, excellent
intellectual frame of mind, free from pride,
ego, ignorance, greed or anger. Possessing
the power of understanding and retention. |
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Aindra |
Devotion to sacred books, study rituals and oblations. Devotion
to virtuous acts, far- sightedness and
courage. Authoritative behaviour and speech.
Able to perform sacred rituals. |
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Yamya |
Free from mean and conflicting desires and acts. Having
initiative, excellent memory and leadership.
Free from emotional binds, hatred, ignorance
and envy. The capacity for timely action. |
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Varuna |
Free from mean acts. Exhibition of emotion in proper place.
Observance of religious rights. |
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Kabera |
Courage, patience, and hatred of impure thoughts. Liking for
virtuous acts and purity. Pleasure in
recreation. |
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Gandharva |
Possession of wealth, attendants and luxuries. Expertise in
poetry, stories and epics. Fondness for
dancing singing and music. Takes pleasure in
perfumes, garlands and flowers. Full of
passion. |
Pitta dominated Rajasikas, intellectually oriented but vulnerable
to temptations, are very human in their character and
approach to life.
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Rajasika Subtype Qualities |
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Asura |
Indulgence in self-praise, bravery, cruelty, envy and
ruthlessness. Terrifying appearance. |
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Raksasa |
Excessive sleep and indolence. Envious disposition. Constant
anger, intolerance, and cruel behaviour.
Gluttonous habits. |
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Paisala |
Unclean habits. Cowardly, with a terrifying disposition.
Gluttonous habits. Fondness for the opposite
sex. Abnormal diet and regimen. |
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Sarpa |
Sharp reactions. Excessive indolance. Frequent fearful
disposition. Brave or cowardly attitude
depending on situations. |
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Praita |
Excessive desire for food. Envious character. Excessive
greediness and actions without
discrimination. |
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Sakuna |
Full of passion. Unsteadiness, ruthlessness, and excessive
attitude for food. |
A dominant
Vata ensures that Tamasika individuals are the most down to
earth, concerned about fundamental questions of
practical existence, specially when confronted by more
spiritual and less physical issues.
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Tamasika Subtype Qualities |
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Pasava |
Lack of intelligence, forbidding dispositions, envious nature.
Excessive sexual indulgence and sleep. |
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Matsya |
Unsteadiness, constant passion, and cowardice. Excessive desire
for water intake. |
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Banaspatya |
Indolence. Excessive indulgence in food. Deficiency of
intellectual faculties. |
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Agni
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Being the biological fire that governs
metabolism, agni encompasses all the
changes in the body and mind from the dense to
the more subtle. Such changes include the
digestion and absorption of food, cellular
transformations, assimilation of sensory
perceptions and mental and emotional
experiences. Agni therefore covers whole
sequences of chemical interactions and changes
in the body and mind. Digestive abilities being
related to the strength of agni.
Agni and
pitta are closely connected. While both are
hot and light, agni is subtle and dry.
The heat energy to help digestion contained by pitta is agni.
Pitta is therefore the container and agni the
content. Agni is acidic in nature and
stimulates digestion. It is subtly related to
the movement of
vata. In every tissue and cell agni is
present and is necessary for maintaining the
nutrition and auto-immune mechanism. By
destroying micro-organisms, foreign bacteria and
toxins in the stomach and the intestines.
A balanced agni therefore is vital for
health. The strength of the body to resist
disease and also its physical strength are
directly related to its heat energy determining
the metabolic processes of the body.
Disturbances to Agni are usually the
chief causes of disease.
As per Ayurveda there are thirteen types
of Agni in the body and mind according to
the conversion and the transformation made. The
most important of them is the Jatharagni,
the gastric fire, responsible for digesting food
eaten by correlating hydrochloric acid in the
stomach and the digestive enzymes and juices
secreted into the stomach, duodenum and the
small intestines. If digestive agni is
low and the capacity is impaired, one may
experience pain, discomfort, feeling of
heaviness or gases gurgling, constipation or
loose stools.
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The Dhatus
The Sapta (seven) Dhatus (tissues) elements form the
pillars of the body that form the means of nourishment
and growth while providing support to the body as well
as the mind.
Rasa (fluid) Dhatu –Derived from the digested food, it nourishes
each and every tissue and cell of the body and is
analogous to the plasma.
Rakta (blood) Dhatu – Regarded as the basic of life, it is
analogous to the circulating blood cells. It not only
nourishes the body tissues, but provides physical
strength and colour to the body.
Masma Dhatu – The muscle tissue, its main function is to provide
physical strength and support for the meda dhatu.
Meda (fat) Dhatu – Consists of adipose tissue providing support
to ashti dhatu. It also lubricates the body.
Ashti Dhatu – Comprising of bone tissues, including
cartilages, its main function is to give support to the
majja dhatu and provide support to the masma
dhatu.
Majja Dhatu – Denoting the yellow and red bone
marrow tissue, its main function is to fill up the
ashti and to oleate the body.
Shukra Dhatu – The main aim of this reproductive tissue is to help
reproduction and strengthen the body.
Since the dhatus support and derive energy
from each other, affecting one can influence others. For
instance, interference in the manufacture of the plasma
affects the quality of the blood, which in turn effects
the muscle. Each tissue type has its own agni,
which determines metabolic changes in the tissues. And
forms by-products, which are either used in the body or
excreted. Menstural periods for example are a by-product
of rasa. The tissues are also governed by the
three doshas, and any imbalance in them also
causes imbalances in dhatus. Heavy periods
therefore can also be caused by the effects of the
excess of Kapha on plasma.
The Malas
Malas are the various waste products of the
dhatus produced during the normal metabolical
process. The three primary malas being Purisa (faeces),
Mutra (urine) and Sweda (sweat).
Ayurveda clearly states that only a balanced
condition of doshas, dhatus and malas
is arogya (good health or disease free condition)
and their imbalance is the cause of ill health or
disease.
Purisa is the waste left back after nutrients of
digested food have been absorbed in the small intestine.
While water and salt absorbed in the large intestine,
the residue now converted into solid faeces, leaves the
body. The consistency of the faeces depending both on
gastrointestinal mobility and nature of diet.
The tridoshas must be in balance to ensure
normal evacuation.
Pitta and
kapha help digestion and
vata governs the mobility throughout the process. Any
discrepancy or imbalance between these can lead to
various symptoms of abdominal heaviness or pain,
flatulance, constipation or diarrohea. It may also give
rise to diseases as rheumatoid arthritis,
osteoarthritis, low-back pain, asthama, bronchitis as
well as stomach ulcers and irritable bowels.
Mutra is derived during the course of biological
processes within the human body. The first stage of
urine formation begins in the large intestine where
fluids are absorbed into the system. The entire urinary
system (kidneys, uterus, bladder and urethra) takes part
in the formation and elimination of urine, regulating
the fluid balance in our body and also maintaining blood
pressure. Any imbalance of increased or decreased urine,
may result in disorders as kidney stones urinary
infections, cystitis, abdominal pain and bladder
disorders.
Sweda is the third primary mala, and it
occurs as a waste product during the synthesis of
meda dhatu (fatty tissue). Eliminated through skin
pores, it controls body temperature and helps to
regulate the electrolytic balance. The channels
responsible for bringing the sweat to skin surface are
known as sweda vaha srotas. It is essential that
normal formation and flow of sweat takes place as
otherwise it may lead to skin infections,
itching/burning sensation over the body, loss of fluid
balance and reduced body temperature.
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