- You Can Stay Healthy This Winter
- By: Rama Kant Mishra
Winter gets a bad rap. It's called
the flu season, the cold season, and the season when contagious
diseases abound. Yet according to Maharishi Ayurveda, winter
doesn't have to be this way. Winter is actually the best season
to improve immunity. It's not a weakening season if you know
how to strengthen immunity.
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To understand how to improve
immunity in the winter season, you first need to understand the
unique concept of immunity in Maharishi Ayurveda. Bala, which
literally means "strength," is the ayurvedic word for
immunity. Bala goes far beyond the Western concept of physical
immunity. Besides physical immunity, it includes psychological
immunity, and spiritual immunity. Bala provides endurance against
any disturbance to these areas.
In ayurvedic terms, immunity
is connected with the digestion. When digestion is strong and
appetite is good, then immunity is strengthened. Whatever weakens
digestion weakens immunity. It's that simple.
Raising Your Immunity Quotient
Besides diet and lifestyle, there
are other factors that determine your immunity quotient. |
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These include your heredity,
the season of the year and your age. It is even possible to develop
an established level of immunity that remains stable throughout
all the ups and downs of life. The chart below explains these
three levels of immunity.
Three Levels of Immunity
1) Hereditary (Sahaj)--the innate level of immunity,
which you are born with.
2) Seasonal (Kalaj)--fluctuating levels of immunity
due to the change of seasons, different stages of life, and planetary
cycles.
3) Established (Yuktikrit)--a balanced, permanent
level of immunity that can be realized by following an ayurvedic
diet and lifestyle.
This type of immunity can be
"planned" using dietary and lifestyle principles and
herbal preparations. If someone is born with an innately low
level of immunity, that fact cannot be changed. So that's why
in Maharishi Ayurveda, we focus on strengthening the second type
of immunity, which fluctuates with the seasons, age, and planetary
cycles. One reason that winter is a good season for building
immunity is that the digestion is stronger in cold weather. Just
as your home's heating system works harder in cold weather, so
your inner digestive fire stokes up when the air turns chilly.
Winter is the season when nature
is ready to nurture us. Due to the digestive level being very
high, people feel hungrier, and can actually digest food better
in winter, thus nourishing their bodies more.
People just think this season
is bad for immunity because as appetite increases, people start
eating more junk food and heavy, hard to digest foods, and thus
weaken their immunity. But it's important to understand that
we are creating the bad immunity, not that nature is giving us
that.
For this reason, it's more important
that people eat immunity-boosting foods in winter, and that they
follow the ayurvedic daily routine. This should be the regimen
in winter, to nourish the mind and body by getting more rest
and eating well.
Other seasons are better for
purifying, but winter is the time to build up and nourish all
systems--the hair, the nails, and the skin. It's also the best
season for taking rasayanas and herbal products, because the
high level of digestion helps people to assimilate them better.
Immunity-boosting Foods and
Lifestyle Tips for Winter
In general, immunity-boosting
foods include those that are fresh, organic, easy to digest,
pure and wholesome. These include fresh, organic milk and yogurt,
vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and ghee (clarified butter).
Foods that are hard to digest
should be avoided if you want to increase your immunity. Commercially
processed foods, as well as canned, frozen, and packaged foods
are old and difficult to digest, so they weaken immunity. Leftovers,
foods grown with chemicals, and foods laced with preservatives
tax the digestive system and clog the channels of circulation,
creating a sluggish, compromised immune system.
Foods that nourish and balance
the body in the cold, dry, winter season are the sweet, sour
and salty tastes. It's best to eat less of the astringent, bitter,
and pungent tastes in winter, although all six tastes should
be included in your diet. Warm, home-cooked, unctuous foods are
ideal, as long as they are not deep-fried and are cooked with
easy-to-digest oils such as ghee or olive oil. Avoid cold or
ice-cold foods, as cold foods and drinks douse the digestive
fire and decreases immunity.
Lifestyle also impacts immunity.
Staying up late, working at night, eating at irregular times,
exposing the body to stress and fatigue, and sleeping during
the day can all affect the digestion and body rhythms--and thus
compromise the immune system. That's why it's important to follow
the ayurvedic daily routine, to keep the digestive system and
other bodily rhythms working smoothly, and thus keeping the immunity
high.
In winter, when the days are
shorter and the nights are longer, it's natural for the body
to crave more rest. Try going to bed a little earlier, and you
will wake up with more vitality and freshness. Winter is a more
inward season, when nature is at rest, so you can take advantage
of this natural tendency by giving the mind and body extra nourishment
in winter.
Doing a daily self-massage (abhyanga)
will also help enhance immunity. Self-massage stimulates all
of the organs of the body, flushes out impurities, and builds
resistance to stress and disease.
If you follow the ayurvedic dietary
guidelines and lifestyle for each season, you can develop an
established, permanent state of immunity, when sickness is no
longer a threat. This is the third level of immunity (Yuktikrit),
which is the goal of Maharishi Ayurveda. This is what "bala"
really means, "a state without disease".
So this winter, try giving your
immunity a shot in the arm--and spend the cold season staying
warm and healthy.
Note -- The material presented in this article is for
educational purposes only and is not to be used to treat, cure
or mitigate any disease. If you have a medical condition, please
consult your physician. |