Ayurvedic Guidelines for Daily Routine: Living in Sync with Nature’s intelligence 

Ayurveda recommends a healthy, consistent daily routine (Dinacharya) based on the 3 pillars of health, (including proper digestion and elimination, proper rest and sleep, and moderation/discipline in lifestyle) which is Synched with the cycles of Nature, including the daily circadian rhythm cycle, seasonal cycles or cycles of Aging.

A regular practice like above which is synced with the Intelligence of Nature, is more potent and helpful than medicine, by bringing the body, mind, emotions, and spiritual elements back to balance. It also helps rest the nervous system by decreasing decision fatigue by following a grounding, soothing, healing, personalized routine which is in contrast with present hectic and unsettling lifestyle.

The Ayurvedic routine creates a series of comforting reference points throughout the day which are very reassuring and rejuvenating to the cellular intelligence and the nervous system, a much needed, welcome break.

So, all of us are welcome to start living with some more self-care, filled with love and compassion towards ourselves, as much as we offer it to the outside world.

You can start practicing couple of these tiny habits gradually and make it manageable for yourself, rather than overwhelming. You can pick up the habits which you feel comfortable doing on a regular basis, or just try them for fun.

Stay committed and relaxed, add things realistically, be predictable and well-paced.

Remember to have self-compassion all through the process!

Here are the brief recommendations below:

-Morning:

  • Wake up before Sunrise, which is the perfect time for the nature’s quietude, light and peaceful energies.
  • Eliminate in the morning to help with early detoxification (bowels and urination)
  • Wash face and eyes with a cool splash of water to drive away the remnant drowsiness and induce freshness.
  • Drink a glass of pure warm water with lemon juice on rising to promote detoxification.
  • Sit down to meditate, enjoy the stillness outside and within, say a prayer, or focus on your breath for a few minutes.
  • Be grateful, reflecting on the blessings in your life.

Cleansing:

  • Clean tongue by scraping 3-5 times, back to front to help detoxify
  • Oil pulling for 2-5 minutes after or before brushing your teeth. Massage gums.
  • Nasya, lubricate nasal passages, or practice nasal rinsing.
  • Practice Yoga, or Stretch and flex your body, to 50% of your capacity.
  • Self-massage with the right kind of oils, try to massage all body parts
  • Take a nice warm shower to rinse off excess oils, with minimal soap use

Food:

  • Eat 3 consistent timed meals a day, or as per your true hunger.
  • Eat foods which are seasonally appropriate and as per your body type and imbalance.
  • Try to include all 6 tastes into your meals
  • Try to minimize snacking in between meals.
  • Eat mindfully, in a pleasant state of mind , with loved ones
  • Eat while sitting comfortably
  • Try to eat when truly hungry
  • Avoid eating when angry or upset
  • Largest meal preferably at noon, medium breakfast and earlier, lighter dinner.

-Afternoon:

  • Establish a consistent, predictable work and rest schedule.
  • Focus on cleaning and decluttering your work and home environment to facilitate good energetic flow.
  • Develop mutually nurturing relations in your interaction with others during the day
  • Be of service to others when possible.

-Evening and bedtime

  • Allow time for proper rest and winding down as needed.
  • Perform the evening routine of brushing, cleaning face and massaging feet etc.
  • Sit down to meditate, say a prayer, do body scanning, progressive muscle relaxation or focus on your breath for a few minutes.
  • Be grateful, reflecting on the blessings during your day.
  • Try to establish a consistent bedtime, preferably by 10 pm, to honor the cyclical energies of nature.

This is an effort to make some of these resources easily available for you in one place.

Please feel free to reach out and let us know if there is another resource that you love, and we would add it to the list.

Enjoy!

Here are some of the Whole food Plant Based resources:

https://nutritionstudies.org/whole-food-plant-based-diet-guide/

https://nutritionfacts.org/healthkit/

https://www.pcrm.org/

https://resources.plantricianproject.org/default/batches/plantricianresources

https://nutritionstudies.org/topics/

Plant-based Recipes:

https://ucdintegrativemedicine.com/recipes/

https://kickstart.pcrm.org/

How to cook without oil:

https://ucdintegrativemedicine.com/2015/03/how-to-cook-without-oil-and-never-ever-miss-it/#gs.phzwke

Track your diet:

Track your nutrition, fitness & health data, Log your diet, exercise, biometrics, and notes.

https://cronometer.com

Food Label reading cheat sheet:

https://ucdintegrativemedicine.com/wp-content/uploads/ucdim-foodlabel.pdf

This short survey estimates the percentage of your daily calories that are derived from the healthiest of foods: whole plants.

http://4leafsurvey.com/

https://4leafprogramdotcom.files.wordpress.com/2015/10/4leaf-pdf-daily-103015.pdf

For an extensive listing of Whole Food Plant-Based Experts and Resources:

http://www.wholefoodplantbasedrd.com/whole-food-plant-based-expertsresources/

Plantrician project research on:

  1. Cardiovascular health
  2. Inflammatory bowel disease
  3. Multiple sclerosis
  4. Mediterranean Diet
  5. List of Ted talks on Plant-Based nutrition
  6. Tools for Parents
  7. Plant-Based on a Budget
  8. Documentaries
  9. Real Food Channel Episodes
  10. Infographics
  11. Plant-Based Programs
  12. Certifications
  13. Cookbooks
  14. Further Recommended Reading

This is an effort to make some of these resources easily available for you in one place.

Please feel free to reach out and let us know if there is another resource that you feel we would benefit from knowing about, and we would add it to the list.

Enjoy!

Various Medical Support Organizations List:

ADA Job Accommodation Network, 800.526.7234
www.jan.wvu.edu

ADA Regional Disability & Business Technical Assistance, 800.949.4232
www.dbtac.vcu.edu

Alzheimer’s Association, 800.272.3900
www.alz.org

American Cancer Society, 800.ACS.2345
www.cancer.org/docroot/home/index.asp

American Council of the Blind, 800.424.8666
www.acb.org

American Diabetes Association, 800.232.3472
www.diabetes.org

Americans with Disabilities Act Employment Helpline, 800.669.3362
www.eeoc.gov

American Foundation for the Blind, 800.232.5463
www.afb.org

American Heart Association Stroke Connection Magazine888.4-STROKE
www.strokeassociation.org/presenter.jhtml?identifier=2533

American Kidney Fund Information, 800.638.8299
www.akfinc.org

American Liver Foundation, 800.223.0179
www.liverfoundation.org

American Parkinson’s Disease Association, 800.223.2732
www.apdaparkinson.org/user/index.asp

American Speech-Language-Hearing Helpline, 800.638.8255
www.betterhearing.org/resources/resource.cfm?resourceID=11

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) Association, 800.782.4747
www.alsa.org

Arthritis Foundation, 800.283.7800
www.arthritis.org

Asthma & Allergy Foundation of America, 800.727.8462
www.aafa.org

Better Hearing Institute, 800.327.9355
www.betterhearing.org

Brain Injury Association of America, 800.444.NHIF
www.biausa.org

Cancer Information Service, 800.4-CANCER
http://www.cancer.gov/aboutnci/cis/page1

Captioned Films/Videos, 800.237.6213
www.cfv.org

Center for Disease Control and Prevention Hotline, 800.342.2437
www.cdc.gov/hiv/links.htm

Children’s Tumor Foundation, 800.323.7938
www.ctf.org

Cleft Palate Foundation, 800.24-CLEFT
www.cleftline.org

Council of Citizens with Low Vision, 800.733.2258
www.cclvi.org

Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation of America, 800.343.3637
www.ccfa.org

Cystic Fibrosis Foundation, 800.344.4823
www.cff.org

Drug Abuse Hotline, 800.662.HELP

Epilepsy Foundation of America, 800.332.1000
www.epilepsyfoundation.org

Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network, 800.929.4040
www.foodallergy.org

Guide Dog Foundation for the Blind, 800.548.4337
www.guidedog.org

Hear Now—National Hearing Aid Bank, 800.648.HEAR
www.sotheworldmayhear.org/forms/hearnow.php

Higher Education and Training for People with Handicaps, 800.54-HEATH
www.heath.gwu.edu

Huntington’s Disease Society, 800.345.4372
www.hdsa.org/site/PageServer

International Dyslexia Association, 800.222.3123
www.interdys.org

International Hearing Society, 800.521.5247
http://ihsinfo.org/IhsV2/Home/Index.cfm

Library of Congress Services for the Blind & Physically Handicapped, 800.424.8567
www.loc.gov/nls

Lupus Foundation Information Line, 800.558.0121
www.lupus.org/newsite/index.html

Multiple Sclerosis Association of America, 800.532.7667
www.msaa.com

Myasthenia Gravis Foundation, 800.541.5454
www.myasthenia.org

National Adoption Center for Special Needs Children, 800.TO-ADOPT
www.adopt.org

National Alcohol and Substance Abuse Information Center, 800.784.6776
www.addictioncareoptions.com

National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, 800.950.NAMI
www.nami.org

National Association for Parents of the Visually Impaired, 800.562.6265
www.spedex.com/napvi

National Captioning Institute, 800.533.WORD
www.ncicap.org

National Down Syndrome Congress, 800.232-NDSC
www.ndsccenter.org

National Down Syndrome Society, 800.221.4602
www.ndss.org

National Easter Seal Society, 800.221.6827
www.easterseals.com/site/PageServer

National Gaucher Foundation, 800.925.8885
www.gaucherdisease.org

National Information Center for Children and Youth with Disabilities, 800.695.0285
www.nichcy.org

National Kidney Foundation, 800.622.9010
www.kidney.org

National Marfan Foundation, 800.8MARFAN
www.marfan.org/nmf/index.jsp

National Organization of Rare Disorders, 800.999.6673
www.rarediseases.org

National Rehabilitation Information Center, 800.34-NARIC
www.naric.com

National Reyes Syndrome Foundation, 800.233.7393
www.reyessyndrome.org

National Spasmodic Torticollis Association, 800.487.8385
www.torticollis.org

National Spinal Cord Injury Association, 800.962.9629
www.spinalcord.org

National Tuberous Sclerosis Association, 800.225.NTSA
www.tsalliance.org

Retinitis Pigmentosa International, 800.344.4877
www.rpinternational.org

Sickle Cell Disease Association of America, 800.421.8453
www.sicklecelldisease.org

Simon Foundation for Incontinence, 800.23.SIMON
www.simonfoundation.org

Spina Bifida Association, 800.621.3141
www.sbaa.org or
www.sbaa.org/site/c.gpILKXOEJqG/b.2016945/k.2321/
Spina_Bifida_Association_Web_site.htm

Stuttering Foundation of America, 800.992.9392
www.stutteringhelp.org

Tourette Syndrome Association, 800.237.0717
www.tsa-usa.org

United Cerebral Palsy, 800.872.5827
www.ucp.org

United Leukodystrophy Foundation, 800.728.5483
www.ulf.org

United Ostomy Associations of America, 800.826.0826
www.uoaa.org

United Scleroderma Foundation, 800.722.4673
www.scleroderma.org

This is an effort to make some of these Local, amazing resources easily available for you in one place.

Please feel free to reach out and let us know if there is another practitioner or service that you love, and we would add it to the list.

Enjoy!

 

Rogue Valley, Southern Oregon Practitioners :

Acupuncturists:

http://middlewaymedicine.com/

http://jademountainmedicine.com/

Physical Therapists

Mary Gorman, PT (541) 535-7019 www.themovementstudio.net

Shawn Flot, PT (541) 890-7372 www.movingintoharmony.com

Michael Pennington (541) 535-2551 www.turningpointpt.com

Psychotherapists

Rod Birnery, MD (541) 535-3338 www.selfsoulcenter.org

Suzanna Nadler, LCSW (541) 535-3338 www.selfsoulcenter.org

Rhiannon Theurer, LMFT (541) 207-8824 www.rhiannontheurer.com (Gifted children and adults, LGBTQ)

Kristen Tussey, LCSW (541) 787-9246 www.ashlandtherapy.com

COMMUNITY REFERRALS:

YOGA Om Sweet Om www.yogaomsweetom.com

Self and Soul Center Retreat Center www.selfsoulcenter.org

It can be really confusing to differentiate between all the types and styles of medicine being practiced.

Here is a list of simple, one-line explanations to try to differentiate between various styles.

  • Integrative medicine: an approach to health that takes into account the entirety or wholeness of an individual and uses a combination of conventional and alternative treatments.
  • Alternative medicine: an approach to healing that falls outside of, and is used instead of, conventional medicine.
  • Complementary medicine: an approach to healing that falls outside of, and is used in combination with, conventional medicine.
  • Conventional medicine: the mainstream/western medical approach, which is taught in most medical schools and practiced in most hospitals and employs treatments such as surgery, pharmaceuticals, and pharmaceuticals.
  • Functional medicine: a systems biology-based approach to medicine practiced by licensed physicians that focus on treating the root cause of disease, as opposed to treating symptoms. Most similar to Integrative Medicine.
  • Lifestyle Medicine: the use of evidence-based 6 pillars of lifestyle therapeutic intervention as a primary modality, to prevent, treat, and often reverse chronic disease.
  • Whole person health: refers to helping individuals improve and restore their health in multiple interconnected domains—biological, behavioral, social, environmental—rather than just treating disease.
  • Traditional medicine: healing practices that come out of the traditions of indigenous peoples.
  • Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM): a collection of healing practices that originated in China and are based on the belief that free-flowing qi, or life energy, is the key to health.
  • Naturopathy: an approach to health that taps into the innate healing power of our own bodies and the natural world.
  • Ayurveda: “The Science of Life.” An ancient whole System of Medicine that originated thousands of years back in India and is wholistic, proactive, personalized, and preventive in its approach.
  • Osteopathy: a medical approach that focuses on treating a person as a whole and uses physical manipulation of the body to promote healing.

Nutritional Approaches

These approaches include a variety of products, such as herbs (also known as botanicals), vitamins and mineralsand probiotics. They are widely marketed, readily available to consumers, and often sold as dietary supplements.

Psychological and Physical Approaches

Complementary physical and/or psychological approaches include tai chiyogaacupuncturemassage therapyspinal manipulation, art therapy, music therapy, dance, mindfulness-based stress reduction, and many others. These approaches are often administered or taught by a trained practitioner or teacher. The 2012 NHIS showed that yoga, chiropractic, and osteopathic manipulation, and meditation are among the most popular complementary health approaches used by adults.

Benefits of Fasting

Fasting affects not just are physical and mental well-being, but also are emotional and spiritual aspects of health.

Many wise ancient cultures have recommended fasting to help with achieving optimal physical, mental, emotional, spiritual health and longevity, and also freedom from disease utilizing intermittent, periodic or seasonal fasting.

Yogic philosophy recommends and encourages to keep a fast on a particular day of the week or month based on your spiritual intentions. (for e.g. Monday or Thursday, or on a full moon day and 11th night of the lunar cycle). It is recommended not only to practice food abstinence on the spiritual fasting day, but also cultivate mindfulness and a positive attitude to help with spiritual progression. Sadhana is the discipline of routine spiritual practice and the surrendering of the ego to the higher self.

The Benefits of Fasting

Fasting, when done correctly, positively affects our physical, energetic, mental, emotional, and spiritual aspects, since we are much more than just the body and mind.

Fasting has shown to have the following health benefits, and more:

  1. Helps with weight loss, leading to physical Lightness, and increasing energy level. Fasting allows the body to use fat as it’s primary source of energy instead of sugar, enabling many athletes to hit low body fat percentages for competitions.
  2. Improving mental clarity, alertness and moods, decrease in depression and anxiety and improves subjective feelings of wellbeing.
  3. Resetting the metabolic button, improving metabolism of sugars and fats.
  4. Resting and healing the digestive system, helping with GI symptoms including IBS, food intolerances, constipation, acidity, gas, bloating.
  5. Revitalizing the immune system, helping with stabilizing many autoimmune diseases, Arthritis, IBD, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s dementia etc.
  6. Facilitating the natural detoxification and cleansing of the body, including the liver and the GI tract.
  7. Helps prevent and reverse several medical conditions like hypertension, hyperlipidemia, obesity, diabetes type 2, autoimmune diseases, clarifying skin problems. (More on detailed medical benefits, and the reasoning behind them.)
  8. It helps improve self-discipline and form long-term good eating habits and patterns.
  9. Creates mindfulness in eating patterns, controlling overindulgences of senses.
  10. It helps with emotional eating and food cravings too, since it enables one to rise above and beyond the set emotional patterns strengthens will power and self-confidence.
  11. It helps promote an inner stillness, and better alignment with out spiritual purpose in life.

 

Read here for the Scientific evidence of benefits of Fasting

A few more common alternative health myths I come across! (for Part I, click here)

Myth: I do not need to take any supplements, since I am eating good food.

Truth: I come across this very frequently in Pacific Northwest, regarding Vitamin D, and Vit B12 in Vegans.

Recent analysis of nutrient intakes of the U.S. population shows that a large percentage of people fall short of the average requirements of many nutrients. Almost everyone falls short of the average requirements for vitamin D and vitamin E, and more than one-third fall short of the average requirements for calcium, magnesium and vitamin A.

Resource:
Top 15 Foods Rich In Essential Minerals – https://www.healthambition.com/food-rich-minerals/

Myth: Since I am so healthy, I will be fine if I take herbs for my chest pain (…manage my fractures naturally, control a bad infection using natural herbals, not need gall bladder surgery etc….)

Truth: In a single word, NO!

Herbal and complementary medicine and techniques have a major role in preventive and chronic disease management, but in acute or emergency cases like chest pain (probably due to heart attack), severe abdominal pain (gall bladder infection/stone impaction, acute stomach ulcer or pancreatitis) accident, injury or fracture, you should still go to get urgent care from your medical provider rather than try to cure-it-yourself!

On the other hand, we have pushed the limits on prolonging life at all cost, not considering the quality of life as our time on this wonderful planet draws closer to its end.

Myth: I have to choose between either conventional or alternative medicine.

Truth: You can do both!

This is true even for cancer treatment. Integrative approaches research for symptom management in cancer patients and survivors have had promising results.

Cancer treatment centers with integrative health care programs may offer services such as acupuncture and meditation to help manage symptoms and side effects for patients who are receiving conventional cancer treatment. NCCIH-funded research has suggested that:

  1. Cancer patients who receive integrative therapies while in the hospital have less pain and anxiety.
  2. Massage therapy may lead to short-term improvements in pain and mood in patients with advanced cancer.
  3. Yoga may relieve the persistent fatigue that some women experience after breast cancer treatment.

Myth: Natural medicine has nothing in common with conventional medicine

Truth: Nature has been providing medicines to treat our diseases and relieve our suffering for many thousands of years.

Pharmacognosy is the study of medicinal drugs derived from plants or other natural sources. Many of our modern drugs were originally derived from either plant, animals, or fungi.

Examples are morphine from the opium poppy, aspirin from the white willow tree, anticoagulant coumadin from spoiled sweet clover. Periwinkle has yielded vinblastine (successful treatment of Hodgkin’s lymphoma, turning a disease that was once uniformly fatal into one that can now be totally cured in many patients) and vincristine (used for treating acute childhood leukemia).

Ethnobotany, the study of traditional human uses of plants, is recognized as an effective way to discover future medicines. In 2001, researchers identified 122 compounds used in modern medicine which were derived from “ethnomedical” plant sources; 80% of these have had an ethnomedical use identical or related to the current use of the active elements of the plant.

Myth: I can go for my surgery without discussing my herbs/vitamins/supplements with my doctor.

Truth: Certain supplements may increase the risk of bleeding, decrease your blood pressure or heart rate, affect the response to anesthesia, or adversely affect the outcome of your surgery….

It is very important to inform your doctor about the vitamins, herbals, OTC supplements etc you are taking. These might need to be stopped up to 2 weeks ahead of an elective surgery.

Here is a link for you to do a self-check on herbals.

Myth: Yoga can’t help serious diseases/it’s just for fun and flexibility

Truth: A Big YES!

There have been numerous studies proving the benefits of Yoga on several diseases, including cancers.

Myth: Alternative health websites just aren’t trustworthy.

Truth: There are fallible websites out there. But there are some good ones. You simply have to follow some rules so you can identify which are right.

If you’re visiting a health website for the first time, these five quick questions can help you decide whether the site is a helpful resource:

  1. Who? Who runs the Web site? Can you trust them?
    Be skeptical about anecdotal information from persons who have no formal training in nutrition or botanicals, or from personal testimonials (e.g. from store employees, friends, or online chat rooms and message boards) about incredible benefits or results obtained from using a product. Question these people on their training and knowledge in nutrition or medicine.
  2. What? What does the site say? Do the claims for the product seem exaggerated or unrealistic? Do its claims seem too good to be true? (Then probably they are not True!)
  3. When? When was the information posted or reviewed? Is it up to date?
  4. Where? Where did the information come from? Is it based on scientific research? Learn to distinguish hype from evidence-based science. Reputable websites will have real links at the bottom of websites, linking to scientific research. Check for university studies.
  5. Why? Why does the site exist? Is it selling something? Beware of such phrases such as: This is not a hoax or Send this to everyone you know.

Myth: Acupuncture, yoga, meditation, massage, all these have no scientific proof of action, so they must be woo-woo!

Truth: Many more insurance companies are approving the use of alternative therapies like yoga, acupuncture, massage therapy, chiropractic care, physical therapy etc. for acute or chronic pain, injuries, depression/anxiety and a variety of other mind-body conditions.

Meditation, yoga, and relaxation with imagery are recommended for routine use for common conditions, including anxiety and mood disorders. Stress management, yoga, massage, music therapy, energy conservation, and meditation are recommended for stress reduction, anxiety, depression, fatigue, and quality of life.

Preliminary studies of the effects of a single session of Swedish massage on hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal and immune function in normal individuals.

Want to know how you can find truthful information?

To find reliable sources of scientifically sound information about vitamin/mineral supplements:

Look for scientific research findings on the dietary supplements. The National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS), as well as other Federal agencies, have free publications, clearinghouses, and information on their Web sites.

The NIH Office of Dietary Supplements has a series of Vitamin and Mineral Fact Sheets that provide scientifically-based overviews of a number of vitamins and minerals. They can provide a good basis for a discussion with your doctor about whether or not you should take a vitamin/mineral supplement.

MedlinePlus is another good source of information on vitamins and minerals.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has a variety of articles and consumer advisories to help consumers inform themselves about dietary supplements, including warnings and safety information, labeling, evaluation information, and FDA’s role in regulating dietary supplements.

For those interested in looking directly at scientific studies, the PubMed Dietary Supplement Subset is a good database to search: here, here, or here.

The Linus Pauling Institute’s Micronutrient Information Center is a source for scientifically accurate and peer-reviewed information regarding the roles of vitamins, minerals, phytochemicals (plant chemicals that may affect health), and other dietary factors, including some food and beverages, in preventing disease and promoting health. You can look here, here, and here. The subset is designed to limit search results to citations from a broad spectrum of dietary supplement literature including vitamin, mineral, phytochemical, ergogenic, botanical, and herbal supplements in human nutrition and animal models.

Some more helpful tips:
6 Things To Know When Selecting a Complementary Health Practitioner – https://nccih.nih.gov/health/tips/selecting
Steps in advising patients who are interested in complementary and alternative therapies – http://www.nature.com/nrclinonc/journal/v10/n11/fig_tab/nrclinonc.2013.125_F2.html
Talking about Complementary and Alternative Medicine with Health Care Providers: A Workbook and Tips – http://cam.cancer.gov/attachments/workbook/talking_about_cam_workbook.pdf

Sources:
http://www.crnusa.org/pdfs/CRNFactSheetNutrientShortfalls.pdf
Quantity is not necessarily better than Quality: What should medicine do when it can’t save your life?
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2010/08/02/letting-go-2
https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/canceralternativetherapies.html
Heart rate variability and treatment outcome in major depression: a pilot study.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24769434
Insular cortex mediates increased pain tolerance in yoga practitioners.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23696275
Effect of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction on Anxiety, Depression and Stress in Women With Multiple Sclerosis.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26835467