- Five Ayurvedic Suggestions For Attaining
Your Ideal Weight Naturally
- By Shreelata Suresh
1. Don't practice deprivation, whether it's fasting
or skipping meals or denying your cravings--it's the quickest
way to start a vicious cycle of weight gain. Instead, eat three
meals a day--a small breakfast and dinner and a more hearty lunch,
and add a healthy mid-morning or mid-afternoon snack if you feel
hungry. Ayurveda does recommend portion control though--the quantity
of food you consume at a meal should be no more than what you
can hold in your two cupped palms, and you should get up from
the table before you feel satiated and completely full.
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The key to weight management
is effectively metabolizing what you eat, eliminating wastes
efficiently and letting the digestion system get a break between
meals. Fasting will only further disrupt your metabolism by not
giving it anything to "work on" on the days you fast.
Same with skipping meals--if your digestive system does not get
something to work on at around the same times each day, it will
not function at peak efficiency when you do eat. And the way
to handle cravings is to gradually educate your taste buds to
desire only what is good for you, by actively choosing more foods
that are right for you each day and eliminating those that are
not. Denying cravings only leads to binges when your body can't
take it any more.
2. Work with your digestion rhythms, not against
them. Many of us today follow an eating pattern that isn't healthy:
we skip breakfast, eat a hurried lunch at our workstation or
on the go, and then eat a large dinner, often too close to bedtime.
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According to ayurveda, your digestive
agni--the "fire" in your stomach that cooks the foods
you eat and makes them into rasa, the nutritional essence that
builds healthy cells and tissues, is most active around noon.
That's why ayurvedic teachings recommend that the largest or
heaviest meal of the day be lunch. A typical ayurvedic vegetarian
lunch includes two or three servings of cooked veggies, a lentil
dish, a whole grain, a chutney (a relish made with spices and
fruits or vegetables), and lassi, a beverage made by blending
fresh yogurt and pure water. Breakfast and dinner should consist
of more easily digested foods.
For breakfast, eat a helping of
sweet juicy fruit, and warm cooked cereal. For dinner, eat light
one-dish meals, or vegetable or lentil soups. A small handful
of soaked and blanched almonds or walnuts makes a nutritious
mid-morning or afternoon snack. If you follow this meal pattern,
your digestion is generally never taxed beyond its capacity,
and your body efficiently metabolizes the food you eat.
3. Keep your internal machinery clean. You take
your car in for an engine oil change periodically, you sharpen
your lawnmower blades at the start of each growing season, you
give your house a good springcleaning each year
shouldn't
you be giving the systems of your body at least a similar degree
of attention?
It's true that your body is built
to eliminate wastes on its own, but it may need a little help
occasionally. The cleaner you keep your insides, the more efficiently
your digestion works to deliver nutrition to the cells and tissues
and move toxins out of the body. If toxins build up in the body,
all the internal systems become less efficient, and one effect
can be that you put on weight and feel heavy and lethargic even
though you are eating right. Ayurveda recommends herbal formulations
such as Triphala to gently aid the process of internal cleansing.
4. Exercise. The original ayurvedic texts were written
long before the wheel or television came around to make couch
potatoes of many of us. Walking was a necessity, so everyone
got lots of exercise each day. Today we need to consciously work
out to incorporate the same level of activity into our daily
routine.
Enjoy your exercise activity
and it will be easier to stick to it. Also, remember that all
of us don't benefit from the same amount or type of exercise.
Choose your exercise activity according to your natural constitution
/ build and your tendency to gain weight. While walking is universally
beneficial, Pitta persons might also gravitate towards water
sports while Kapha individuals need to add something really energetic
such as racquetball.
5. Get enough sleep each night. Research studies
have connected sleep deprivation to obesity as well as to poor
eating habits, a sluggish metabolism and depression, all of which
in turn also contribute to weight gain. Ayurvedic healers recognized
this connection between sleep and digestion long ago, hence the
ayurvedic ideal daily routine, which urges you to be in bed before
10 p.m. and wake up before 6 a.m. for the best quality and quantity
of sleep.
Eating a lighter meal at night,
and finishing the meal at least two hours before you go to bed
will help you fall asleep quicker. Manage your work and R&R
time so you don't have to stay up late to meet work deadlines
or to "wind down" with late night T.V. To help your
physiology adapt to higher levels of stress or more demands on
your body and mind, take the Ashwagandha Rasayana. Ashwagandha
is known for its adaptogenic capability and as a tonic for the
nervous system. |