Articles

Re-Introducing the Ayurvedic Accreditation Commission

(Re-) Introducing the Ayurvedic Accreditation Commission

You may know, accreditation is a critical step on the journey toward recognition and licensure for Ayurveda in the US. In September 2018, the National Ayurvedic Medical Association Accreditation Commission (NAMAC) was formed as a division of the National Ayurvedic Medical Association (NAMA). In August 2021, NAMAC launched as a separate organization and in March 2023 the organization rebranded as the Ayurvedic Accreditation Commission (AAC).

As with any health profession, it is important that each of the three pillars to support professionals and provide consumer safety are strong, independent bodies. In US-based Ayurvedic medicine, these pillars are accreditation of educational programs (AAC); certification of individuals’ competency to practice (National Ayurvedic Medical Association Certification Board, NAMACB); and professional membership organizations (NAMA and other local/state associations) to support and help grow the profession. The collective goal to be federally recognized by the US Department of Education requires that AAC demonstrates viability as an independent organization, fully autonomous, and free from any conflicts of interest.  

AAC, a diverse organization with a mandate to represent the interests of all stakeholders in the Ayurvedic community, currently has directors and advisory council members from a number of stakeholder groups. AAC currently has 21 Ayurvedic education programs with Candidacy for Accreditation status, and looks forward to welcoming more schools to this list in the coming months. 

AAC invites all members, friends, followers, and supporters of NAMA to the AAC website  and learn more about their vision and mission. If you’d like more information on AAC, please reach out to Lisa Cavallaro, AAC’s Executive Director at info@ayurvedicaccreditation.org

NAMA and AAC are looking forward to strengthening partnerships, raising awareness, and building a bright future for Ayurvedic professionals around the country!

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.

Teaching the Full Wealth of Ayurveda in the Modern Western World

by Nidhi Pandya, CAP

“I consume ashwagandha, thus I practice Ayurveda.”

“I follow Ayurveda. I have taken a dosha quiz online.”

“I like what Ayurveda has to offer, but I find it very restrictive and daunting.” 

I have lost count of the number of times I have heard such statements. Given its vast scope and accessibility, it’s surprising how completely misunderstood and underutilized Ayurveda is here in the West. To put it into perspective, 36 million Americans practice or have tried yoga and 65 million have explored Traditional Chinese Medicine, while only 250,000 Americans have dabbled in Ayurveda. Given the potential that Ayurveda holds, this number boggles my mind.

Upon investigation and introspection, I found that Ayurveda is often presented in a very dogmatic and counterintuitive form. How did a health preserving and nurturing science that was meant to be intuitive, get so far removed from its original intent? This question led me to look back into my own childhood. My grandfather, being an Ayurvedic healer in Mumbai, introduced me to Ayurveda when I was still a baby. As a result, I was taught this natural healing science like one learns a first language, effortlessly through immersion. This approach eventually brought me to an epiphany: Ayurveda needs to be passed on as a science, not with a list of practices or prescriptions. Rather, it should be passed on as a complete set of principles that can be applied to all aspects of one’s life.  

As a practitioner in the West, carrying my lineage from the East, I feel responsible for passing on this wisdom in a way that communicates its true potential so more people can benefit from its richness. Together, we can present Ayurveda in its true light and preserve its original teachings, albeit in the modern world. The first part of this article deals with the challenges of the current presentation of Ayurveda by putting us in the shoes of the modern Ayurvedic enthusiast. The second part offers some tried and tested ideas that practitioners can put into practice to empower their clients and give them a more intuitive understanding of Ayurveda.

Challenge #1: You need to know your dosha to practice Ayurveda

The Challenge

Most people stumble on Ayurveda because it respects bio-individuality. And while a dosha quiz makes people feel understood, it can quickly become a trap. The body is a very complex machine that is changing all the time. It is impossible for any quiz to cover all aspects of a human body and at the same time be able to consider its dynamism. People are often frustrated as different quizzes may yield different doshic results. Additionally, putting ourselves into a box can be confusing as we may experience different symptoms at any given time. This often leads to doubt and frustration and even shying away from Ayurveda altogether. 

The Solution

While taking a dosha quiz can be entertaining and give someone an idea of his or her dosha, the results should not be considered a definitive analysis. However, the experience can empower people to tune into their own body to understand symptoms. Presenting them with a chart of 20 gunas, or pairs of opposite qualities (for example, wet and dry, hot and cold), and exploring their symptoms on the basis of their gunas, has often worked well with my clients. Additionally, dividing all symptoms into three categories—building or nourishing (K), transforming or heating (P), and drying or depleting (V)—can be very useful in getting a sense of one’s own body. As intuitive understanding is achieved, one can extend that understanding to everything in his or her universe. This is more empowering than surrendering to a quiz that one cannot fully comprehend.

 

Challenge #2: You have to eat Indian foods to practice Ayurveda

The Challenge

While Ayurveda has its roots in India, it is a truly universal science based on simple principles of the planet—of Mother Nature. When people feel they are limited to spicing their food with turmeric or eating khichdi every day, they find Ayurveda extremely restrictive and are less likely to practice it and pass it on. Additionally, certain Indian spices and foods can be very pungent for some. I often say that an Indian spice such as turmeric, when consumed with the wrong understanding, can become non-Ayurvedic, whereas a Western spice used with the right principles can become Ayurvedic.

The Solution

As practitioners, we have a duty to communicate the principles on which and how substances are used in Ayurveda. Substances are not used for their absolute benefits as measured in laboratories. They are used on the principle of Dravya (Substance), Guna (Properties) and Karma (Action). Each substance is understood for its potency, its properties, and thus its actions. It can then be determined if the herb or food should be used alone or in combination to create the desired outcome. Ayurveda provides the tools, or pramanas, so that new substances can be studied through this lens and their application can be understood in the modern world. The misuse of Ayurvedic substances has caused a backlash and thus slowed down the growth of Ayurveda globally.

 

Challenge #3: Ayurveda is not backed by science

The Challenge

In the world of rationalization and research, people are likely to label Ayurveda as unscientific. We ascribe so much power to only those things that can be comprehended through the five senses that we tend to discard explanations that require us to look beyond our usual way of perceiving as gibberish.

The Solution

One needs to be reminded of the innate power and instinct we all possess. Some of the most complex processes of life are intuitive. For example, when a baby is born, he or she instantly knows how to suckle. Even the process of intercourse, which leads to the creation of an entire organism, is almost free of intellect and cannot be replicated in a laboratory with cells even if one tries. I also often point at the accuracy of the scriptures to prove their merit. A verse in the Sharira Sthana, states that a woman is most likely to conceive on Dwadash Nisha, the twelfth night after her period. How did the sages know this information long before the West even understood ovulation? It is important to convey that this knowledge was procured through inner wisdom that was a result of deep meditation and total detachment from the sensory world.

 

Challenge #4: Ayurveda is popularized as a treatment modality

The Challenge

People often come to Ayurveda in their quest for an alternative healing method when the mainstream medical system has yielded no results. They are prescribed herbs and a diet they may follow blindly and see some results without knowing how these treatments work. While this approach to Ayurveda may help them in the short term, it does not offer the potential to transform their way of living. Ayurveda clearly states that eliminating the cause of the disease is more important than merely treating it.

The Solution

Seldom do people have an awareness or understanding that Ayurveda is an all-encompassing science and a source of profound wisdom that lends perspective to every aspect of life and our lived experience. It is not only a treatment modality, but also a body of knowledge that really teaches us how to live well, nurture and sustain well-being, and prevent disease. For example, the second chapter of Ashtanga Hridayam talks about sadvrutta, or good conduct. Similarly, the Uttar Sthan goes into details of caring for a newborn. There are no questions regarding human life that Ayurveda cannot answer. By offering clients simple Ayurvedic principles to follow, we can empower them to change their everyday life for the better. Some principles I offer in my practice are listed at the end of this article.

 

Challenge #5: Ayurveda is ancient

The Challenge

If Ayurveda dates back 5,000 years, why should it be relevant today? A lot of people dismiss Ayurveda as an outdated system, one that may have held merit in the past but is obsolete today.

The Solution

Just as physics is the science of matter and chemistry is the science of chemicals, Ayurveda is the science of life. The laws of physics don’t change, but their applications do. Similarly, since Ayurveda is based on the study of the human body and its connection with the universe, the principles of Ayurveda will remain relevant for as long as the Earth orbits the sun. I have found that instead of backing up the merits of Ayurveda using modern-day research, which can be easily refuted, it has been more rewarding to explain the Ayurvedic perspective by going back to how it originated, with a deep understanding of the macro-cosmos and micro-cosmos.

 

Challenge #6: Ayurvedic terms lose their meanings when translated

The Challenge

I have found this issue to be a real challenge. Sanskrit is a rich language, and the nomenclature encodes what a substance means. Very often, the message and depth are lost in translation.

The Solution

I find it very useful to use analogies and metaphors to convey the right meaning. For example, the word for oil is sneha, which also means “love.” Translating the name of the substance used for abhyanga as “oil” misses that point. Therefore, it is important for us as practitioners to familiarize ourselves with the basics of Sanskrit terminology so we can convey its deeper meaning to our clients. I have found that people connect more deeply with their practices when they understand their true essence.

 

Simple Principles & Tools

I would now like to offer some simple principles and tools that as practitioners we can use to educate our clients, teaching them how to bring sustainable Ayurveda into their lives or the lives of their clients. 

Following the Circadian Rhythm

I have found this to be the easiest way to communicate the ideal design for the day. We are diurnal mammals, and just as all mammals function according to their relationship with the sun, so should we. Our body is designed to rise with the sun and go to sleep when it sets on most days, except during really cold winters. Additionally, as the sun is just coming up in the morning and the earth remains wet from dew, our agni and biological systems are mirroring these phenomena. We can honor this synchronicity by kick-starting our system with some vyayam or exercise and a warm breakfast. As the sun peaks in the sky, our agni and ability to concentrate and focus also reach their zenith, making the afternoon pitta kala the best time for a big meal and intellectually stimulating work. All phases of the day can be explained by encouraging the client to look at the clock of the universe. 

Human Beings Are Warm Blooded

Human beings are warm-blooded creatures with a normal body temperature of 98.7℉, and our body likes to stay in that zone. At the same time, our body is constantly processing and transforming what we take in, whether it be food or information. Just as all transformation in the universe requires warmth, so does our human body, by way of endothermic and exothermic reactions. This analogy makes a great case for avoiding cold foods and keeping warm all that we consume.  

The Gunas Chart

Encouraging clients to pin up a chart with the 20 gunas to refer to consistently will be greatly beneficial. I encourage my clients to go back to the chart every time they are experiencing a symptom and to try to see where it falls on the chart. I also encourage them to bring their attention to the opposite guna to understand what they need to do or what they may need to avoid.

The above are simple and non-overwhelming ways to bring Ayurveda into one’s life. If we can make this science more accessible to people in a comprehensible manner, I am certain that it can be established as a health system that takes people away from the fear of disease and gives them the freedom that comes from being well.


About the Author

Nidhi Pandya, CAP, is a third generation Ayurvedic practitioner. She has a strong foundation in the ancient Ayurvedic texts. She is a core part of the faculty at the US based Shakti School and been a speaker at various organizations, including Google and The Chopra Center.

Annual Update From NAMA’s President

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Join us for the Annual President’s Update Webinar on October 27, 2021 from 3-4 pm Pacific.
Learn more →


by Margrit Mikulis ND, AD

It has been an honor to have had a front-seat view of the incredible work accomplished this past year. I feel proud of our growing staff, volunteer, and member workforce; their service is the heart and soul of NAMA. We are so fortunate that we have such a dedicated group of people within our organization who are thrilled about Ayurveda and who work to help NAMA and the profession thrive!

Since our organization’s inception, hundreds of people have served as volunteers, and notably during this past year, over 70 members have served NAMA in this capacity. I am inspired and stand in awe knowing the capabilities of our “think tank.” We are such a great powerhouse of professionals creating and gifting time for everything that represents our great organization and community within NAMA and for Ayurveda. Ayurveda is growing in the United States because of our collective contributions and the hard work we do each year.   

How does NAMA work as an organization?

At the close of our fiscal year, the Executive Director requests an annual summary from the Chairs of each Committee at NAMA to highlight the teamwork and accomplishments from the previous year. All detail then gets compiled into our annual report, which can be accessed online (2020/2021 Annual Report). This year we brainstormed about how we can help our members better understand how NAMA functions. In the spirit of knowing that we can always improve, we now aim to educate our community about how NAMA operates, and how we uphold our vision and mission as our initiatives evolve each year. For all of you, it is my hope that this article will serve as a step toward that goal.  

Before diving into the details of our board’s processes, I will provide some helpful background information on the general structure of a Not-For-Profit Organization (NPO).

NAMA is a Private NPO and as such incorporates the following structural features:

  • Stakeholders: People and organizations invested in NAMA’s success, such as members, sponsors, donors, volunteers, and beneficiaries

  • Governance Body: The Board of Directors elected by NAMA stakeholders

  • Director Nominations: Election of Directors by the voting members

  • Management: The body of people who oversee operations, including the Executive Director, who reports to the Board of Directors  

As a volunteer-driven professional membership organization, we rely heavily on our stakeholders, including our voting members, to drive NAMA’s progress. Without stakeholders we would not have an organization. We view our stakeholders as the mitochondria of NAMA, here to empower people and to help advance our profession, build relationships, continuously improve the organization, and increase our success so that we can continue to achieve excellence in educating the country and the world about Ayurvedic medicine. Our stakeholders are the building blocks and internal engine of NAMA that hopefully will continue to sustain our strength and fuel out growth for years to come.  

Yearly, the Board of Directors collaborates with the Executive Director to determine the type of work that needs to be accomplished in any given year. We can determine our direction because the Board, the Executive Director, the staff, and our Committee members are driven by NAMA’s mission, vision, and purpose. The board determines organizational goals and objectives for the coming year and the Executive Director, the staff, and all the Committees work in concert to achieve the goals set each year by the board.

As the Board of Directors, we must ask big questions:

  • What do we need accomplish in any given year?

  • Was there any work that was carried over from the previous year, and if so, what are the fiscal ramifications?

  • What initiatives do we know we need to complete?

  • Are our operations aligned with our strategic plan?

  • Did we meet the previous year’s goals?

  • What obstacles prevented us from completing work that needed to get done?

In addition, I would like to emphasize that we are always having to answer the question can we afford to do this?. We faithfully rely on our budget as the financial framework that guides us during the year (Financial/Treasurer’s Report).

These are just some examples of how we determine our path to the future and find the best ways to execute our vision and strategy while upholding our mission to serve our membership and the Ayurvedic community.

Workflow and Our Volunteers

Our Executive Director and staff are responsible for the administrative functioning of NAMA, an enormous task that is constantly expanding and becoming more complex. The NAMA Board of Directors and all the individuals from the different Committees make up the entirety of our volunteer team. You can dive deeper into learning more about the NAMA Board of Directors and each Committee by reviewing the annual report. Our volunteers are students, general members, and professionals from all over the country. Like me, some began volunteering as students who eagerly entered the field with a strong desire to progress to a professional track. Others are already involved in some Ayurvedic professional capacity and serve because they are also interested in growing Ayurveda and helping the profession evolve in the United States. When I reflect on such a fine collection of individuals dedicating their time, the volunteers seem like the mosaics of the Taj Mahal, each one contributing something beautiful and vital to NAMA’s structure and function over the past 21 years.

Highlighted Outcomes from 2021

Like many other organizations, NAMA experienced challenges and had to change direction in 2020 because of COVID-19. Timelines and work shifted as we responded to the needs of our community. Below are some highlights from the past year that can help illuminate some of NAMA’s incredible accomplishments in 2020:

  • Accreditation Council: The NAMA Board of Directors and the board of the National Ayurvedic Medical Accreditation Council (NAMAC) worked the entire year to prepare for a successful Iaunch of NAMAC’s operations in August 2021. With NAMA’s financial support and the collaborative efforts of the NAMAC Board of Directors and NAMA’s Executive Director, Hilary Garivaltis, NAMAC was able to hire an Executive Director, Lisa Cavallaro, in February 2021. NAMA helped secure NAMAC’s initial operating budget with a financial commitment of $50,000 over the next year. This is a monumental endeavor and a historical moment for the Ayurvedic profession as we approach a new horizon of academic excellence for Ayurvedic schools and programs in the United States. 

  • Certification Board: The NAMA Certification Board (NAMACB) is now four years old and has been working hard on promoting the Ayurvedic Health Counselor and Ayurvedic Practitioner certification exams while developing the Ayurvedic Doctor exam. The Ayurvedic Doctor beta testing phase should begin in early-2022. This exam will serve as the third component of the only official and verifiable set of professional certifications for Ayurveda in the United States. A huge accomplishment for any profession, the creation of certification exams is a hallmark of any profession’s growth and viability.

  • Conference/Events: In 2020, we initially faced the challenge of having to make a swift and difficult decision to cancel our annual in-person conference but quickly moved forward to host our first virtual conference. Additionally, with the help of an outside consulting team, we determined that we would expand our events and host educational programming for the Ayurvedic community in 2020/2021. These events included Ayurveda Day and The Business of Ayurveda. As the pandemic extended further into 2020, the Board of Directors determined that it would be in our community’s best interest to host our 2021 annual conference on a virtual platform as well. Although the cancellation of the in-person conference is disappointment, we welcome this new opportunity to keep our community connected and to get more experience hosting large online events.

  • Membership: The Membership Committee hosted a Leadership Summit for the first time this past year to give our Committee volunteers a chance to learn about all the wonderful things each Committee is doing. The Committee also hosted the first round of Student and Professional “Mingles” in response to the call for more time to connect and interact as a community. These events have been a great success, and we plan on continuing and expanding them in the coming year. We also created a special BAMS Task Force to focus on the particular needs and contributions of this growing portion of our membership community. Finally, the Membership Committee has now opened to programs that offer Ayurvedic Yoga Therapy and has welcomed the first two programs this year.

  • Diversity and Inclusion: The NAMA board established the Diversity and Inclusion Committee in July 2020 to support the growing needs of our community.  The board felt it was imperative to offer a training series led by a specialist in the field so that we could provide more education on this important issue to our members. The Committee worked diligently and after conducting a rigorous selection process hired Diversity Antiracism and Inclusion Trainer Mariama Boney of Achieve More, LLC. With Mariama at the helm, NAMA hosted a three-part monthly training program between February and April 2021. “Reveal, Realign, Restore” was an interactive and recorded program that gave the participants an opportunity to discuss and celebrate diversity and inclusivity within the Ayurvedic profession.

  • President’s Corner: From April 2020 through April 2021, I hosted 19 virtual programs for our community on topics ranging from Classical Ayurvedic Perspectives on COVID-19 to Biodiversity and Health with Vandana Shiva. Over the past year, I had great conversations with many NAMA board members, keynote speakers from our conference, and other professionals who specialize in topics related to Ayurveda. All past recordings are available to members and can be accessed from the events page on our website. 

Looking back on this past year, I am hopeful and remain positive about the future, yet feel compelled to acknowledge the suffering and challenges faced by so many of you and by all communities locally and globally. A massive global healthcare burden exists that can no longer be ignored. We know that this pandemic is an undeniable example of how our environment directly connects to our health and well-being. We as Ayurvedic professionals are grappling with the same questions confronting all of humanity and every faction of healthcare:

How do we respond to this increasingly urgent call for global health and wellness?

How can we as professionals and individuals promote health in our families and within our communities?

How can we protect Mother Earth and all of humanity so that our children and their children will come to know that a healthy planet equals healthier people?

Since the beginning of 2020, maintaining our health has taken on new meaning. Our service and the wisdom of Ayurveda are needed now more than ever. It is so important to acknowledge how the shared experience of the pandemic continues to influence and shape all of us as professionals. Knowing this I feel that we as colleagues must work together and keep striving to be of service to the Ayurvedic profession, to our communities, and to the world.

NAMA remains committed to growing with all of you. Ayurvedic medicine may be a young profession in this country but this ancient wisdom has flourished for millennia and is now taking root here in the United States. Collectively we are stakeholders in this profession, each one of us carving out the distinctions that define what Ayurvedic medicine means to the American people. As pioneers, we expect to wrestle with challenges; however we know that hard work, endurance, and commitment have proven to yield success after success for the National Ayurvedic Medical Association. Thanks to the efforts of teachers and students, doctors and clients, schools, product companies, cooks, authors, and scientists, and the passionate desire of the general public for alternative healthcare solutions, Ayurveda is no longer a quiet voice echoing across the mesas of New Mexico. We are a nationwide organization with a loud voice, opening doors for each other and all those who need Ayurveda’s natural, holistic approach to healing. 

We are all living and breathing examples of why Ayurveda continues to blossom and bear fruit, and every one of us can celebrate with certainty that we are changing lives, making history, and growing in strength and togetherness.

Hari Om.

In Gratitude,

Margrit Mikulis, ND, AD

NAMA President


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About the Author

Margrit Mikulis ND, AD, is a Naturopathic and Ayurvedic Doctor, practicing in Vermont and New Hampshire. She incorporates Ayurvedic principles and practices with other integrative medical systems and modalities. She has over 15 years of clinical experience serving children and families in the northeast and throughout the United States. Margrit serves on the NAMA Board of Directors and is currently NAMA’s President.

National Ayurvedic Medical Association 2021 Annual Conference Report

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by Baba Lou Haber

The 17th Annual Conference of the National Ayurvedic Medical Association (NAMA) brought together online 45 experts whose presentations centered on Ayurveda as evidenced-based and integrative medicine. The conference demonstrated how practitioners are harnessing scientific research to validate classical Ayurvedic approaches, growing expertise in disciplines of emerging importance such as microbiome research and genomics, and building bridges with Western medicine.

Integrative Medicine Defined

Among the first presenters was Victoria Maizes, MD, executive director and professor of medicine at the University of Arizona Andrew Weil Center for Integrative Medicine. Maizes offered a definition of integrative medicine as “healing-oriented medicine that takes account of the whole person, including all aspects of lifestyle” and “emphasizes the therapeutic relationship between practitioner and patient, is informed by evidence, and makes use of all appropriate therapies.”

An internationally recognized leader in integrative medicine, Maizes began with an alarming statistic from JAMA: Even though 70% of deaths in the United States are due to behavioral and environmental factors, only 1%–3% of healthcare dollars are spent on disease prevention, compared to 97%–99% spent on medical care and biomedical research. She emphasized how “something is missing from our healthcare systems, and we believe that we can do a better job taking care of our patients through integrative medicine.”

Innovative Integrative Approaches

That spirit of advancing a better way to improve healthcare and foster wellness was abundantly evident throughout the NAMA conference. Presentation topics included evidenced-based approaches to healing leaky-gut syndrome (in which an unhealthy gut lining allows undigested food and toxins to leak into the bloodstream); innovative therapies to address gastrointestinal tumors; Ayurvedic approaches to mitochondrial diseases and disorders (which occur when mitochondria fail to produce sufficient energy for the body to properly function); and Ayurvedic prevention and treatment of gynecological disorders.

Among the presenters on yoga were Susan Bass, AP- and AYT-NAMA, E-RYT 500, C-IAYT, a certified Ayurvedic practitioner and Ayurvedic yoga therapist who founded the Sarasvati Institute of Ayurveda & Yoga Therapy and the Sarasvati Mission. “Ayurveda excels at digestion and detoxification, so it is about improving the quality of blood,” noted Bass. “That’s why Ayurveda and yoga are exponentially more effective when practiced together, because who cares if you have the blood moving around the body when it is of poor quality and does not nourish the cells and the organs?”

Bass led two sessions. The first examined the beneficial role of yoga in reducing stress and improving mental health. In her second presentation, Bass brought together asana, pranayama, mudra (gestures), and marma (vital body junction points) therapy to address vishama agni (irregular/weak metabolism), the type of digestive imbalance caused by excess vata (air/wind).

A Deeper Understanding of “Evidence”

Bhushan Patwardhan, PhD, national research professor at the Interdisciplinary School of Health Sciences, Savitribai Phule Pune University, provided an overview of Ayurveda as an evidenced-based science. He emphasized that Ayurveda and yoga require a different approach to research and a fresh look at what constitutes evidence, given that they have an entirely different framework than Western medicine.

According to Patwardhan, the integration of Ayurveda and modern medicine will entail an “epistemological transformation process” in which Ayurveda as a holistic, experiential, and natural approach will need to be more fully appreciated and understood by medical practitioners and the medical research community.

A New Paradigm to Foster and Sustain Health and Wellness

In her presentation “Biodiversity Is Health; Biodiversity Is Sustainability,” Vandana Shiva, PhD, likewise emphasized the critical importance of a paradigm shift—one to a more holistic understanding of health that includes our interconnectedness with all species and the entire planet.

“The paradigm we have today is one that doesn’t work with whole systems,” said Shiva, a researcher and eco-feminist food-sovereignty activist who founded the Research Foundation for Science, Technology, and Ecology in Dehradun, India. In contrast, Shiva noted, Ayurveda teaches us that health is about balance. “The body is not little fragments and parts; the body is a non-separable whole interacting non-separably with the world and the biodiversity around us,” she said.

Shiva ended her talk with a call to action. “If there is one thing we can take forward from ecology, from biodiversity, from Ayurveda, it is our interconnectedness,” she said. “We are one, and we can be interconnected through health and regeneration, or through disease and degeneration. [E]ach of us should cultivate the will and determination and the hope that the regeneration part is what we will evolve.”

A Look at COVID-19

NAMA additionally offered a post conference event providing perspectives from conventional medicine and Ayurveda on COVID-19. The presentation, by Dhaval Dhru, MD, and Mimi Guarneri, MD, included a survey of preliminary research looking at promising results of both integrative and Ayurvedic treatments of the virus.

Throughout the conference, NAMA encouraged attendee donations to help the people of India during the country’s COVID-19 crisis through such organizations as Sewa International USA (www.sewausa.org).

Mark Your Calendars

Planning is already underway for NAMA’s next annual conference. The 2022 gathering will be a special event where participants will hopefully again meet in person. The theme of the conference, to be held in Tucson, Arizona, April 22–24, is “Ayurveda for Family Health.”

 

Originally published in Yoga Therapy Today, a publication of the International Association of Yoga Therapists (www.iayt.org). Shared with permission.


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About the Author

Baba Lou Haber has written for CBS News, served as a communications executive for several companies and public agencies, and is a Cicero Award–winning speechwriter. He is currently studying to be an Ayurvedic Health Counselor. Baba Lou also serves as a member of NAMA’s Communications Committee.

The Dangers of Self-Medicating with Herbs

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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.

Healing from Disasters by Getting to the Root Cause

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By Madison Madden, AD

The word Ayurveda translates to the “science of life.” While its chief objective is to preserve health and prevent disease, Ayurveda also offers sophisticated healing and curative practices informed by an understanding of the laws of nature and the symbiotic relationship between human health and our environment. 

This ancient wisdom is waiting for us to seize it at a time when we are wrestling with global health crises, climate-related catastrophes, and many other challenges. Ayurveda understands all of these hardships as symptoms states of dis-ease. The Charaka Samhita,[1] one of Ayurveda’s four main texts, uses the term Jana Pada Udwansa, translated as a “disaster of a community of people,” to characterize four such states of dis-ease:

  1. When a region gets denatured (Desha)

  2. When water becomes toxic (Jala)

  3. When air becomes polluted (Vayu)

  4. When cycles of time become irregular (Kala)

When we look at the realities of our day, we see that we are not just experiencing one or two of these phenomena, but all four at once. 

Animal habitats have been denatured by urban encroachment. Water in parts of both the developing and developed world has become toxic. This past fall, the U.S. West Coast had the worst air quality in the world, and on a typical day in Delhi, the sun is not even visible. Cycles of seasons are changing around the globe due to rising temperatures and extreme weather patterns. These climate changes pose great danger: A landmark 2019 UN Climate Report estimates that about one million animal and plant species are threatened with extinction, more than ever before in human history.

So, what insight does Ayurveda offer regarding these afflictions, our planetary dis-eases? Ayurveda teaches us that a root cause of our societal problems is a disconnection from nature.

To put it simply, human beings on the whole attempt to dominate nature rather than live in harmony with it. Failure to adequately care for and protect our planet, unsustainable practices, and overconsumption are contributing to the breakdown of ecosystems and the extinction of species. 

In our systemic disconnection from nature, we have lost touch with ways of living with and caring for the natural world that were passed down generation after generation in societies and cultures around the globe. This ancient wisdom is invaluable in navigating our way back to a life that dwells within the bounds and bounties of nature. 

Cultivating Sattva

 According to Ayurveda, the remedy to our global crises is sattva, one of the three gunas, the prime qualities of nature. Sattva embodies harmony, wholesomeness, and virtue. 

 The other two gunas, rajas, often translated as action or agitation, and tamas, commonly translated as inertia, are also natural aspects of life. Disease, however, manifests only in rajasic and tamasic states. 

For example, constantly competing with others, which leads to stress, is a form of rajas. Overconsumption of heavily processed foods results in tamas. Both can contribute to chronic disease. 

Healing occurs primarily through sattva, which is why Ayurveda practitioners emphasize sattvic lifestyles. Just as nature expresses itself differently in various parts of the world, each individual must learn to live in harmony with their own nature and local surroundings. Such lifestyles comprise practices and diets that calm the mind, nourish rather than deplete or toxify the body and the environment, and recognize the interdependence between the individual and community. 

Moving Clients toward Sattva 

Here are five examples of how you can help your clients live a more sattvic lifestyle. 

  1. Introduce them to the concept of matching their nature to Nature. Point out the similarities between the cycles of their bodies to the cycles of nature, and help them to live in greater connection. Examples include rising and setting with the sun, eating to the rhythm of agni (digestive fire), adjusting routines in keeping with the change of seasons, and easing into new stages of life. The wheel of the doshas (kapha, pitta, and vata) can be seen in all of nature. This is a wonderful way of teaching clients about the doshas without overwhelming them.  

  2. Encourage them to discover a sense of purpose. Help your clients widen their gaze beyond the stresses of their individual circumstances and look toward how they can find ways to serve others. Help them connect with what brings light to their lives and what gifts they may have silenced. Finding purpose opens a pathway out of rajasticand tamasic dis-ease patterns. 

  3. Teach them how to reduce stress and nourish their minds and bodies through their breath. Guide your clients to experience how the quality of their breath can transform their mindset, improve health, and increase their ability to respond meaningfully to others. 

  4. Help them embrace a sattvic diet. Teach them about the impact of their food choices. Help them transition to more plant-based and seasonal diets, as well as foods and beverages that are suited to their particular constitution. Suggest solutions to their cravings for sugar and simple carbohydrate comfort foods that honor their rituals but replace tamasic choices with sattvic ones.  

  5. Educate them about the benefits of panchakarma. Charaka notes that panchakarma detoxification therapy is an outstanding method for a person afflicted with the four forms of Jana Pada Udwansa. Panchakarma can lead to a true paradigm shift in mind and body. 

Looking Inward at Your Own Practice: Three Questions to Ask Yourself

Teaching and healing by example are fundamental qualities of a revered Ayurvedic practitioner. I urge you to ask yourself three difficult but vital questions: 

  • How can I live a more sattvic lifestyle? 

  • Where do I sacrifice sattva for short-term or material gains? 

  • How can I help create more sustainable, local, and seasonal resources for my practice and community? 

Listen carefully to your answers. Our inward gaze can help us move from blaming others and finger pointing to cultivating the sattva we need to help ourselves and others heal from the Jana Pada Udwansa, the disaster of a community of people. 


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About the Author

Madison is a NAMA-recognized Ayurvedic Doctor, Writer, Environmental Educator, and Activist. She is the Co-founder of Pacific Coast Ayurveda and the International Institute of Tantric and Vedic Sciences, as well as a founding member of Mendonoma Climate Action Group, who hosted the largest regional event for Global Climate Strike Day in September 2019. Passionate about the vital intersection of health and environment, she can be found at livewiseheal.com.

[1] See Chapter 3, Vimanastana.

Sanskrit: The Language of Ayurveda

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THE IMPORTANCE OF SANSKRIT IN PRACTICING AYURVEDA IN THE U.S. 

by Maria Radloff

Like yoga, Ayurveda exists within the language of the gods—Sanskrit. Rooted in poetic Sanskrit verses, Ayurveda had been passed down solely through the memorization of these sacred scriptures until only recently when Ayurveda began its journey beyond the borders of India.

Unlike yoga, whose language and culture have been completely Americanized in this country, Ayurveda has maintained more of its traditional Indian character. It is almost impossible to study Ayurveda in the U.S. without using some Sanskrit terminology. Everyone understands vāta, pitta, and kapha, even if they’re not pronounced properly.

The meaning of so many Ayurvedic concepts is so deeply embedded in the language, that it would be nearly impossible to teach Ayurveda without using Sanskrit. Imagine replacing the word pañcakārma with “cleansing process” every time you refer to this Ayurvedic procedure. The English term hardly does justice to the treatment’s complexities. Likewise, how would you refer to the process of upaśaya without having that word in your Sanskrit vocabulary? Sanskrit words don’t always translate neatly into English because they often convey concepts whose meanings are deeper and more nuanced than their literal definitions suggest. Some of these Sanskrit concepts don't exist in Western culture, so translating them is impossible; you have to explain them instead, which can be arduous. Without the Sanskrit terms, you have to resort to lengthy explanations or deficient English replacements to speak about Ayurvedic principles and practices.

One of the beautiful things about Ayurvedic terminology is that once you understand the root words, you can decipher and understand many of the Ayurvedic terms more clearly by breaking them into their original parts. For example, it’s easy to figure out that hrdroga refers to heart disease once you know that hrd means “heart” and roga means “disease.” This approach gets a little trickier with words like grdhrasi (the Ayurvedic term for sciatica). In this case, the root grdhra, which means vulture, refers to a characteristic sign of the condition—an ungainly vulture-like walk.

As someone who learned Sanskrit in the U.S. through yoga, I had an advantage in understanding the language of Ayurveda through these root words. For example, prasara, which means “spread,” is used in Ayurveda to refer to the third stage of disease, when it spreads from its original site to other locations in the body. This word is familiar to yogis from the frequently mispronounced name of the popular pose prasārita pādottānāsana, or wide spread intense extended leg posture. Because yoga and Ayurveda were born from the same philosophy, Sanskrit is equally interwoven into both sciences, so understanding one will help a student understand the other.

One of the biggest obstacles to learning Sanskrit is the variety of ways that words are spelled. There is the Americanized version of Sanskrit that spells words phonetically, such as mooladosha, and sheeta. This is helpful for those unfamiliar with the Sanskrit alphabet, but creates a quandary for those with a little bit of Sanskrit knowledge, since some of the sounds are lost or unclear.

Then there is the IAST convention of writing that uses special markings on characters. This system indicates exactly how each sound should be pronounced, but is altogether confusing to anyone without Sanskrit training, not to mention scary!

And the final obstacle is that Sanskrit is downright hard! In the Sanskrit classes I take, everyone, including the teacher, is always looking up terms, and we frequently have to correct our study guides and handouts. I always tell my own Sanskrit students that they just need to let go of trying to “get it”—that Sanskrit can't be “gotten” in the usual way. I explain that I will make mistakes, and they will make mistakes and that's just how it goes. Sometimes the hardest part is just being okay with that.

If you’re studying Ayurveda in the U.S., I believe you’ll find that most schools use at least some Sanskrit vocabulary, even if it’s just the most basic, Americanized form. Here are several key reasons why I believe it is important for anyone studying Ayurveda (and yoga) to learn Sanskrit, along with the sounds of its alphabet.

Reason 1: Lineage

Ayurveda always has been, and still is, handed down via Sanskrit ślokas and sūtras. As an Ayurvedic student, I’ve found that almost every class I attend is taught by a traditional Ayurvedic Doctor from India who was required to learn not only Sanskrit, but also the classic Ayurvedic texts. Not a class goes by where we don’t hear a verse from Aṣṭānga Hrdayam or Caraka Samhitā. My teachers sometimes need to recall a memorized verse from a Sanskrit text to answer a question correctly.

Reason 2: Communication

For Ayurvedic professionals to understand one another, they must share a common language. I have met people from many different countries and cultures who practice Ayurveda, and regardless of their native language, they all share the common language of Ayurveda. While I don't think it's important to know Sanskrit when communicating with rogis, as most of them won't apprehend the nomenclature, it is important when working or learning around other Ayurvedic professionals, researching topics in this field, or reading Ayurvedic texts. Without knowing Sanskrit, one will be locked out of understanding many books and other resources.

Reason 3: Understanding

The principles of Ayurveda remain the same whether they’re conveyed in English or Sanskrit, but when you learn them in English, your understanding of them will only be as deep as the translator’s. There is deeper wisdom held in the language of Ayurveda, as many of the Sanskrit words don't translate into English. This is due to the fact that the concepts the words are expressing don’t exist in the American culture. To understand the philosophies underlying Ayurveda, we must connect with the words that embody these unfamiliar ideas. Ayurveda has been learned through chanting and sound for millennia, so the true meaning of Ayurveda resides in its native language.

Reason 4: Purify the Mind

One of the most efficient ways to purifymanas is to use Sanskrit and chanting. Spoken out loud or even internally in the mind, Sanskrit can purify the mind and create a more sattvic state. To use Vedic chants or mantras for these types of practices, knowledge of the Sanskrit alphabet and the sounds associated with it is vital.

Reason 5: Sound

In Sanskrit, the meaning of a word is considered inseparable from its sound, so when words are mispronounced, their meaning is lost. For example, if you say ananda with only one measure of sound on the first a, you’re actually saying “no bliss.” To tap into bliss, you need to pronounce aananda (ānanda) with two beats on that first a sound. For example, I always explain to my yoga teacher-training students that there are no wrong pose names, just new poses; for example, mispronouncing nāvāsana as navāsana turns boat pose into number nine pose. So to properly use Sanskrit as a healing tool, you must understand the sounds of Sanskrit.

Reason 6: Accuracy

If you’re going to work with Sanskrit words, why not do it right? There is no extra effort involved in saying ka-pha than there is in saying ka-ffa (i.e.,a breathy “p” sound versus an “f” sound). For someone new to Ayurveda, it is just as easy to  learn the correct pronunciation of a word as it is to learn an incorrect one. Therefore, I think it is exponentially more important for a teacher of Ayurveda to know how to pronounce Sanskrit words than it is for the student. The students will echo the teacher’s pronunciation. To learn Sanskrit properly they need an authentic learning experience, where the teacher is well versed in speaking the Sanskrit sounds. One of the things I appreciate most about my teachers is their precise pronunciation. Even though there are words they Americanize for students, I hear all of the authentic Sanskrit sounds that make up the words when they speak—the retroflexes, the aspirates, the nasal sounds. Hearing these sounds is so helpful. Since I understand the nuances of the Sanskrit alphabet, I can usually grasp the meaning of words more fully when the sounds of the Sanskrit characters that the words are rendered in are spoken exactly as the phonetic rules of the language dictate. So why not incorporate proper Sanskrit pronunciation into Ayurvedic education? The price of the education will remain the same, but it will provide far greater benefits.

Reason 7: Standardization

As Latin is to the Western medical industry, so is Sanskrit to Ayurveda. Most industries have their own languages. As a web designer, I need to be able to speak in HTML and CSS, which are computer languages. Architects, engineers, lawyers all speak a unique language that conveys the principles and concepts that inform their day-to-day work. Why should our industry be any different? Sanskrit is the precise way to communicate the meaning of Ayurvedic terms. Imagine trying to explain Ayurvedic concepts or use your own everyday language rather than standard-industry terms when discussing a case. The lack of a common language would significantly increase the potential for errors and miscommunications that could undermine the effectiveness of traditional Ayurvedic protocols.

Reason 8: Truth

Without knowing the language of Ayurveda, there will always be a barrier between the truth and you. Sanskrit embeds universal truths within it, and since Ayurveda and yoga constantly invoke the Self and the discovery of those truths, it can serve as a conduit to that magical ah-ha moment in your journey. Sanskrit is not an old, abandoned language; it is the living language of the Divine that lives deeply within us all, that unites us, and provides language for the deepest wisdom we could ever touch upon.

In Conclusion

Although I love that Ayurveda continues to spread (prasara) around the world, adapting to an endless number of languages and cultures, I will always believe that there is just a bit more truth and understanding conveyed when the Sanskrit language is used. The principles of Ayurveda are powerful whether described in English, Spanish, or Hindi, but the true master of Ayurveda that will use this divine language and really know Ayurveda in its deepest sense.


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About the Author

Maria Radloff is an Ayurvedic Wellness Practitioner student at Kerala Academy. She begrudgingly began studying Sanskrit and Vedic chant when she became an ashtanga student of Dave and Cheryl Oliver in Scottsdale, Arizona. Her studies quickly unlocked the magic of Sanskrit, and soon she was devoting more energy to the language than to the asanas—in effect, the language became her yoga. Maria teaches Sanskrit for yogis and Ayurveda students and professionals.

Editor Note: I used “American” Sanskrit in a normal font, such as Ayurveda and Yoga. Words that are meant to be in pure Sanskrit are in italics with IAST.

The Value of the NAMACB Certification Board Exam 

By Paula A. Witt-Enderby, Ph.D., CAHC
 
When new graduates think about preparing for the National Ayurvedic Medical Association Certification Board (NAMACB) exam, they probably become nervous as I was when I was getting ready for mine. We dread studying. We have doubts about our mastery of the subject matter. We wonder why we’re doing this.   
 
It’s perfectly normal to feel this way. When nearing the end of my health counselor training in May 2017 at the Kripalu School of Ayurveda, I wondered if I was prepared enough to pass the boards. I wasn’t sure when I should take the boards—I didn’t want to take them before I had studied sufficiently, but I also didn’t want to wait too long for fear that I would have trouble recalling all that I learned during my training.  
 
Nevertheless, I took the boards soon after graduating because I recognized their importance. The NAMACB boards play a critical role in standardizing training from the different schools of Ayurveda, lending credibility to our field, and ensuring that each of us emerges from our respective training programs as a truly competent Ayurvedic professional. 
 
From everything I now know after a year and a half in practice, I can say without a doubt that preparing for and taking the boards has given me confidence in my counseling skills and lent credibility to my services as a certified Ayurvedic health counselor. I proudly display my NAMACB-recognized Ayurvedic health counselor insignia on my business cards, on my website, and in any informational brochures or presentations that accompany my workshops.  
 
Getting ready for the boards by reviewing the study guides prepared by NAMACB and posted on its website helped me untangle many of the complexities of our field: I gained a clearer understanding of how to place the philosophy and history of Ayurveda in the proper context, what the 25 principles of samkhyaare and how they form the entire basis of Ayurveda, and how to differentiate between interrelated yet distinct Ayurvedic concepts such as the following:

  1. The goals of Ayurveda (maintain the health of the healthy and cure the sick) 

  2. The three pillars of Ayurveda (diet [ahara], lifestyle [vihara], and herbs [auśadha]) 

  3. The three pillars of health (diet [ahara], sleep [nidra], and energy conservation [bramacharya]) 

  4. Ayus(body, mind, senses, soul) 

  5. The three causes of disease (misuse of the senses [asatmyendriyartha samyoga], crime of the intellect [prajnaparadha], and temporal factors [parinama])  

 
The study guides helped not only clarify the six schools of philosophy and their main principles—areas that I had trouble synthesizing during my training—but also deepened my understanding of the characteristics and symptoms associated with amaand low ojasby dosha(vata, pitta, kapha) and by system (digestive, musculoskeletal, nervous, general) as they relate to imbalances in the mind and body.  
 
Equally important, studying these guides helped realize what I didn’t know, sending me back to my class notes, training handbooks, or Dr. Lad’s textbooks to fill the gaps in my knowledge. The preparation process also forced me to memorize all the relevant details about herbs—their Sanskrit name, classification by genus and species, indications, contraindications, qualities, etc.  
 
As a professor for 23 years in a pharmacy school and coming from a discipline where testing, certification, and licensure are routine steps to a successful career as a healthcare professional, I want to reassure every examinee that the high quality of our Ayurvedic training ensures that we gain the competence required  to complete  a similar path to professional credibility.  
 
No doubt your training was as rigorous as mine and your teachers, like mine, did a brilliant job of infusing your training with the essence of Ayurveda as it was conceived in classic texts and passed down  in words, mantras, songs, and writing exercises and presented you with enough case scenarios from their diverse backgrounds and broad and deep experience to enable you to not only pass the boards but also achieve excellence as Ayurvedic professionals. 
 
We were led to Ayurveda for a reason. We are lucky to have been given this ancient wisdom. May we all trust in ourselves as our teachers and the Ayurvedic community trust in us!


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About the Author

Dr. Paula Witt-Enderby, Ph.D., CAHC is a Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology, NIH-funded melatonin research scientist and Board Certified Ayurvedic Health Counselor. She blends Western and Eastern medicine into her research on bone and breast cancer.

State Licensure For Ayurveda Legitimacy and Recognition

By David T. McConaghay, AD

State licensure will grant Ayurveda the legitimacy and official recognition it needs to realize its full potential to positively impact the lives of millions of people.
 
Licensure is a state-level function. As the pre-eminent national Ayurvedic organization, NAMA is busy doing everything in its power to facilitate the pursuit of licensure. These foundational efforts include the establishment of scopes of practice, national board exams www.namacb.org for three levels of Ayurvedic professionals, as well as a council to accredit Ayurveda schools (NAMA Accreditation Council, NAMAAC).
 
NAMA, however, can only do so much. Therefore, if we are to perform our role as modern-day stewards of the vidya that is Ayurveda, those of us invested in properly protecting and promoting its study and practice must organize ourselves at the local level.
 
There is already a great deal of ongoing activity in this arena. Formal state associations currently exist in California, Colorado, Florida, and Minnesota, and there are groups currently forming in many other states, including but not limited to Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Texas. Leaders from these groups meet monthly to share best practices and inspire each other.
 
State organizations serve as a focal point for local Ayurveda communities. They offer membership benefits, send informational newsletters, host educational events, and hold regular leadership meetings to serve the needs of Ayurvedic professionals in their state.
 
In addition to cultivating community solidarity, these state groups will serve as the avenues through which the Ayurvedic profession will achieve the official recognition it needs to reach a mass audience in America.
 
While each state organization is inherently independent, we see immense benefit to maintaining general alignment and open channels of communication between states and with NAMA. Look for updates in 2019 detailing more about the precise structure of the relationship between NAMA and the state organizations.
 
If you are curious about what’s happening in your state or want to make something happen in your state, please contact us jolynne@ayurvedanama.org, and we’ll get you connected!


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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David T. McConaghay, AD is the Communications Chair of the Colorado Ayurvedic Medical Association (COLORAMA) and is the Chair of the NAMA's State sub-committee, whose mission is to be an organizing force offering support to state-level Ayurveda organizations.