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Body, Mind & Consciousness:
Deepen Your Understanding of Ayurvedic Healing
with Ayurvedic practitioner and educator
Vishnu Dass
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Ayurveda is India’s 5000-year old science
of life, health, and longevity. According to Ayurveda, there is
no separation between body, mind, and consciousness. Therefore,
the concepts of health and disease must address all of these aspects.
The mind is organically related to the physical body. Any imbalance
of the doshas (psycho-physiological principles, or humors) will
create signs and symptoms at all levels. The doshas rule and regulate
all functions of the organism and determine disease proneness
at the physical level and emotional response at the mental level.
They are known as vata, the energy of movement; pitta, the energy
of metabolism and transformation; and kapha, the energy of lubrication
and cohesiveness.
The bond between body and mind can be easily observed when physical
fluctuations disturb our mental state, as when we have a flu and
aren’t able to concentrate, or when our behavior changes
depending on diet
and lifestyle habits. This is one of the reasons why Ayurveda
places great emphasis on diet and lifestyle for preventing disease
and restoring health through balancing the doshas.
The body-mind complex is an organic unity, but mind and body are
not the same. The mind appears to be wherever we direct our attention.
It can function apart from the body consciousness, as when we
are dreaming. The physical body is primarily an organ of perception
and expression through the senses and motor organs. We could say
that the body is a gross form of the mind, as it serves as a vehicle
for the mind to perceive, act, and express itself. On the other
hand, the mind is influenced by the impressions of the world we
receive through the senses and motor organs. So body and mind
work constantly together. Yet what gives us the sense of who we
are is not the physical body. It is what we think and feel, how
we perceive and experience the world and others around us. So
let’s look at the mind in more detail, from a philosophical
and yogic perspective.
Samkhya philosophy serves as a major philosophical foundation
for both Ayurveda and yoga. This is one of the reasons why both
sciences are so closely related and complement each other. According
to the Samkhya system, the two eternal principles of creation
are Purusha, or pure consciousness, and Prakruti, or matter. All
creation emerges from their interface. These two principles are
at work at every level of existence, from the Cosmic Mind to the
elements of nature (earth, fire, water, air, and ether) that form
everything, including the doshas.
The mind is part of Prakruti (matter) and is not conscious by
itself. Just like a movie projector shines a light upon a screen
and creates an image that seems real, so does Purusha reflect
on all matter and makes it appear to be conscious. This reflection
is what gives us the “I-sense” of individuality (the
ahamkara, or “I-sense”), as well as the ability to
cognize the world around and within us. All impressions, emotions,
thoughts, intuitions, and experiential knowledge are modifications
of this mind stuff. In other words, everything the mind perceives
is colored by this “I-sense.”
This “I-sense” creates the subject-object experience.
It is the experiencer that connects all experiences. It works
along with another three aspects of the mind: the buddhi, or subjective
body of intelligence and discrimination; the manas, or objective
mind field; and chitta, or the mind field within which the other
aspects of the mind work to create the sense of experience. These
three aspects serve the interests of the “I-sense”
and this is why we all experience the world according to ourown
projections.
When the sage Patanjali, the author of the Yoga Sutras, states
that the “control of thought waves in the mind is yoga”
(Sutra 2), he is referring to controlling all four aspects of
the mind. This is because according to yoga, as well as Ayurveda,
the ultimate cause of disease is ignorance (the illusion that
the “I-sense” is real), the ultimate cure of disease
is discriminative wisdom (the realization that the “I-sense”
is an illusion), and the ultimate state of health is liberation
from the cycle of reincarnation and suffering (through that ultimate
realization). Therefore, when we look closer, the “control
of thought waves in the mind” is the cure to all disease
in yogic terms. It is the realization that we ultimately are Purusha,
pure consciousness, and not just its distorted reflection in the
mind (the “I-sense” or ego). In other words, the goal
of both yoga and Ayurveda is
the ultimate merging of the individual mind with pure consciousness.
Thought waves (or vrittis) include emotions, imaginations, memories,
intuitions, and subliminal and cognitive thoughts. Every thought
creates an impression, or samskara, which is stored in the experiential
mind field (chitta). Samskaras are like seeds that can be dormant
for many years and/or lifetimes, and become activated when the
environment is favorable for them to blossom. They can be perceived
as latent tendencies. This is why one thought gives rise to another
thought, or a particular situation can trigger a specific emotional
response. Since each thought wave is already conditioned by past
impressions, it creates another impression that reinforces a thought
pattern, which eventually forms a belief system along with other
thought patterns. So there is a feedback loop in our mental processes
that colors our perceptions and triggers both our conscious and
subconscious responses. Since thought patterns and impressions
become part of the subconscious mind, they can either promote
health or imbalance, depending on their subtle qualities.
All disease has a mental, emotional, and physical component, even
though we tend to focus primarily on the physical symptoms (unless
the mental aspect is too strong). This is obvious when, for instance,
a person develops a disease after receiving bad news, or after
experiencing trauma, abuse, or grief. Here the emotional pain
manifests on the physical level. Likewise, the effects of inappropriate
diet and lifestyle, seasonal changes, or the environment can have
a mental manifestation. High pitta (or fire element in the body)
can cause volatile emotions such as anger or jealousy; high vata
(or air element) can produce anxiety and fear; and high kapha
(or water element) can create dullness and depression. Balancing
the doshas would bring harmony to the mental and physical aspects
in both cases, since the doshas govern the different functions
of body and mind, from the gross to the subtle level, and because
in essence body and mind are an organic unity.
All impressions and tendencies in the mind permeate our needs,
drives, habits, relationships, addictions, and so on. In reality,
thought waves and impressions are constantly expressing themselves
through the body. For instance, if we love ourselves and believe
that we deserve to be loved, we will project those beliefs through
our attitude, habits, relationships, and general state of health.
On the other hand, suppressed or unresolved emotions will cause
imbalance. In Ayurveda, we say that bad food combining causes
ama, or toxins, because the body cannot properly process certain
food combinations. In the same manner, unresolved (“unprocessed”)
emotions and impressions can also cause mental ama, which will
eventually manifest as disease. This is where yogic practices
and meditation are invaluable to quiet the mind and remove the
emotional garbage we all carry.
According to Ayurveda and yoga, nature consists of three subtle
qualities, known as sattva, rajas, and tamas. Sattva is purity,
right action, and spiritual purpose. Rajas is the principle of
movement, change, and excitability. Tamas is inertia, darkness,
and confusion. From rajas comes the false idea that the external
world is real, which makes us lose track of the world within and
seek happiness outside of ourselves. Rajas creates desire, ambition,
mental activity, and emotional upsets. From tamas comes the ignorance
that veils our true nature and weakens our power of discrimination.
Laziness, lethargy, and lack of determination or purpose are created
by tamas. An ego (“I-sense”) that identifies itself
with the body is also created by tamas. Sattva gives clarity,
concentration, love, and devotion. Sattva as a state of balance
is responsible for health and healing.
These three universal qualities deeply influence the mind-body
complex. Just as we can have a more predominant dosha in our constitution
(say we are pitta predominant), so can our mind have a more predominant
quality (either rajasic, tamasic, or sattvic). To have sattva
as the predominant quality in our nature is the key to good health,
creativity, and spirituality. A sattvic diet consists of food
that is easy to digest, nourishing, and promotes clarity and purity
of mind, such as grains, vegetables, dairy, fruit, and nuts. A
sattvic lifestyle includes mindfulness, discipline, spiritual
practices like prayer, yoga and meditation, and cultivating virtuous
qualities such as honesty, non-violence, compassion, contentment,
selflessness, and so on.
We can transform our mental constitution through an Ayurvedic
sattvic diet and lifestyle, healthy routines, and yogic disciplines
such as hatha yoga, pranayama, mantra repetition, and meditation.
Furthermore, Ayurveda offers subtle therapies to restore balance
at all levels, such as Shirodhara (mental rejuvenation therapy),
Marma Chikitsa (energy point therapy), or panchakarma, a deep
cleansing and rejuvenation program. These therapies are profound
and effective because they address the whole person and restore
health at the cellular and subconscious levels, embracing the
organic connection between body, mind, and consciousness.
Vishnu Dass, LMT, NTS, CAyu, is an Ayurvedic clinician, and
educator. He is the Director of the Blue Lotus Ayurveda Center,
in Asheville, NC, where he offers health consultations, panchakarma,
rejuvenating therapies, and educational programs and workshops.
Contact him at 828-713-4266, or www.bluelotusayurveda.com
Back
to New Life Journal..
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February/March
2005
Issue
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Business Listings
Your guide to health practitioners
and sustainable businesses in Asheville, NC, Atlanta and Athens,GA, Greenville,
SC and the Southeast
NATURAL HEALING
massage, acupuncturists, energy medicine, herbalists, yoga centers,
natural medicine, healers, alternative therapies, healing workshops
NATURAL FOODS
health food stores, restaurants, nutritionists, whole foods chefs,
natural foods lectures & programs, organic farmers, caterers
MIND & SPIRIT
therapists, churches, workshops, retreat centers, support groups
BUSINESSES
sustainable businesses in the Southeast |
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