आयुर्वेद — Āyurveda
The Classical Science of LifeA Complete Guide to
Ayurveda
Rooted in texts that are over 5,000 years old, Ayurveda is not a collection of remedies. It is a complete science of how life works — and what brings it into harmony.
Drawn from Charaka Samhita · Sushruta Samhita · Ashtanga Hridayam
Chapter One
Where Ayurveda Comes From
The word Āyurveda is formed from two Sanskrit roots: āyus, meaning life or lifespan, and veda, meaning knowledge or science. Together, they name something precise — not the science of healing, but the science of life itself, in all its fullness.
The foundational texts are three: the Charaka Samhita, concerned principally with internal medicine and philosophy; the Sushruta Samhita, the earliest known surgical text in human history; and the Ashtanga Hridayam of Vagbhata, a synthesis written in the 7th century CE that distills both into accessible verse. These three are collectively called the Brihat Trayi — the Great Triad.
"Ayurveda is the knowledge by which one knows what is beneficial and what is harmful to life, what makes life long and what makes it short."
Charaka Samhita, Sutrasthana 1.41Ayurveda does not treat the body as a machine that breaks down. It understands health as a dynamic equilibrium — between the individual and their nature, their season, their food, their relationships, and their own mind. Disease, in this view, is not an enemy that attacks. It is a message from a system that has been pushed too far from its own truth.
The tradition recognizes eight branches, known as Ashtanga Ayurveda: internal medicine (Kayachikitsa), pediatrics (Kaumarabhritya), psychiatry (Bhutavidya), head and neck medicine (Shalakya Tantra), surgery (Shalya Tantra), toxicology (Agadatantra), rejuvenation (Rasayana), and vitality (Vajikarana). It is, in every sense, a complete system.
Chapter Two
The Five Elements — Panchamahabhuta
Ayurveda understands all matter, including the human body, as composed of five fundamental elements — the Panchamahabhuta. These are not elements in the chemical sense. They are qualities of matter. They describe how things behave, feel, and move.
Akasha (Space) is the most subtle — it is the container in which everything else exists. In the body, it is the cavities: the chest, the abdomen, the channels. Vayu (Air) governs all movement — the breath, the nervous impulse, the movement of food through the gut. Agni (Fire) governs transformation — digestion, metabolism, the conversion of experience into understanding. Jala (Water) governs cohesion, flow, lubrication — plasma, mucous, tears. Prithvi (Earth) governs structure and stability — bone, muscle, flesh.
These five elements combine in pairs to form the three biological forces that govern individual physiology. That is where the doshas come from.
Chapter Three
The Three Doshas — Vata, Pitta, Kapha
Every function in the body is governed by one of three biological forces. They arise from the five elements — and between them, they orchestrate everything: movement, transformation, structure.
Vata
Space + Air
The force of movement. Governs the nervous system, breath, circulation, elimination, and the movement of thoughts. Balanced: creative, light, enthusiastic. Disturbed: anxious, dry, irregular, unable to sleep.
Dry · Light · Cold · Rough · Mobile
Pitta
Fire + Water
The force of transformation. Governs digestion, metabolism, body temperature, and intelligence. Balanced: warm, clear, decisive. Disturbed: angry, inflamed, sharp-tongued, acidic.
Hot · Sharp · Light · Oily · Spreading
Kapha
Earth + Water
The force of cohesion. Governs lubrication, immunity, growth, and mental stability. Balanced: loving, patient, grounded. Disturbed: heavy, congested, slow, resistant to change.
Heavy · Cold · Slow · Oily · Dense
The doshas are not fixed labels — they shift with season, time of day, age, food, stress, and sleep. Knowing which dosha is dominant in you, and which is currently elevated, is where Ayurveda gets personal.
Chapter Four
Prakriti — Your Original Nature
Prakriti is the doshic blueprint you were born with — the particular proportions of Vata, Pitta, and Kapha set at conception. It does not change. It is your constitutional baseline — the state in which you are most naturally healthy.
Distinct from Prakriti is Vikriti — your current state. The two are often different. A Vata person living a Pitta lifestyle develops a Pitta Vikriti. Ayurveda's first task is to find the gap between who you were born as and who you have become through accumulated stress, food, and environment — then close it.
Knowing your Prakriti is not a personality type. It tells you how to eat, when to rest, how much to move, what aggravates you, and what restores you. It is the most precise health map that exists for a person.
Chapter Five
Agni — The Seat of Health
The Charaka Samhita is direct: "Agni is the cause of life." When Agni is strong, food is fully digested, experience is fully processed, immunity holds. When Agni weakens or goes erratic, disease begins — not as an event, but as a slow accumulation.
Agni is not just stomach acid. It is the digestive intelligence at every level of the body — the central fire (Jatharagni), the tissue fires, the elemental fires. When the master Agni is strong, all others follow.
The Four States of Agni
- Sama Agni — balanced. Reliable digestion, steady energy, regular elimination. The goal.
- Vishama Agni — irregular (Vata). Erratic appetite, gas, bloating, constipation.
- Tikshna Agni — sharp (Pitta). Intense but destructive — heartburn, inflammation, loose stools.
- Manda Agni — dull (Kapha). Slow, incomplete — heaviness, mucus, low appetite, weight gain.
Agni also digests experience. Grief, stress, and unresolved emotion that cannot be processed become Ama — the toxic residue that is the root of most disease.
Chapter Six
Ama — The Root of All Disease
Ama is the Sanskrit word for "unripe" or "undigested." In Ayurveda, it refers to the toxic residue that forms when digestion — at any level — is incomplete. The Charaka Samhita names Ama as the origin of all disease: āma eva samasto rogāṇāṁ mūlam — "Ama alone is the root of all diseases."
Ama is not a single substance. It is the accumulation of everything the body or mind has taken in but could not fully transform — poorly digested food leaving unmetabolised residue in the tissues; unprocessed emotions leaving heaviness in the heart; unresolved experiences leaving confusion in the mind. All of these are Ama.
"Just as a seed does not sprout in a field without soil, disease does not arise in a body without Ama."
Charaka Samhita, NidanasthanaThe signs of Ama are widely recognised — a coated tongue upon waking, heaviness in the body, fatigue that doesn't resolve with rest, cloudy thinking, aching joints, dull skin, a sense of stagnation. These are not diseases in themselves; they are signals that the digestive intelligence has been overwhelmed.
Ayurvedic treatment always begins with Ama — reducing its production, clearing its accumulation, and restoring the Agni that should have prevented it. No tonic or supplement can fully work in a body full of Ama. The soil must be cleared before seeds will grow.
Chapter Seven
The Seven Dhatus — Layers of the Body
The Dhatus are the seven bodily tissues, each nourished sequentially by the one before it. They represent a progression of refinement — from the most gross to the most subtle — and they reveal why disease often takes so long to appear and why healing requires sustained effort.
Nourishment travels through the Dhatus in sequence: food is digested into Rasa (plasma), which nourishes Rakta (blood), which nourishes Mamsa (muscle), and so on, each transformation requiring its own Agni. The entire cycle takes approximately 35 days. The final Dhatu — Shukra and Artava, the reproductive essence — is understood as the most refined product of the whole system.
The clinical significance of the Dhatus lies in their sequentiality. A disease that has reached Asthi (bone) or Majja (marrow) has been developing for a very long time — it passed through six earlier stages without being caught. Early intervention in Rasa and Rakta is vastly easier than treating conditions that have settled into the deeper tissues.
Chapter Eight
Living in Rhythm — Dinacharya & Ritucharya
Dinacharya — daily rhythm — is one of Ayurveda's most practical teachings. The texts recognise that time itself has a doshic quality: Kapha governs the early morning and early evening, Pitta governs midday and midnight, Vata governs dawn, dusk, and late afternoon. Aligning your activities with these rhythms is not superstition — it is working with the body's natural hormonal and metabolic cycles rather than against them.
The Ayurvedic Day
- 6–10 am (Kapha time): Rise before sunrise. Move the body. Eat a light breakfast. Kapha is dominant — movement prevents its heaviness from settling.
- 10 am–2 pm (Pitta time): Agni is at its peak. This is when the main meal should be eaten — the largest, most nourishing meal of the day.
- 2–6 pm (Vata time): Creative and communicative work. Vata's mobility makes this ideal for movement, conversation, and thinking.
- 6–10 pm (Kapha time): Slow down. Eat a light dinner. Let the body begin to prepare for sleep. Evening Kapha supports rest.
- Before 10 pm: Sleep. Pitta takes over at 10 pm — if you are awake, it drives the mind toward activity, analysis, and appetite.
Ritucharya — seasonal rhythm — recognises that the doshas shift with the seasons, and that what is medicine in summer may be imbalancing in winter. The classical texts describe six seasons (shad ritu), each requiring adjustments in diet, sleep, exercise, and lifestyle. Failing to adapt to seasonal change is, in Ayurveda, a primary cause of illness.
Chapter Nine
Ojas, Tejas & Prana — The Subtle Essences
Beyond the gross tissues and the three doshas, Ayurveda describes three subtle essences that represent the highest refinement of biological intelligence. They are the bridge between the physical and the non-physical.
Ojas is the most subtle product of perfect digestion — the essence of the Shukra Dhatu. It is what gives the body immunity, resilience, and the quality of radiance you see in a person who is deeply well. It is depleted by overwork, poor food, trauma, grief, excessive sexual activity, and chronic stress. It is built by adequate sleep, nourishing food, meditation, love, and the regular experience of beauty. The Charaka Samhita says that Ojas is what keeps us alive — ojo hanyate, when Ojas is destroyed, life ends.
Tejas is the subtle essence of Agni — the fire of pure discernment and metabolic intelligence at the cellular level. It governs the luster of the eyes, the clarity of the skin, and the sharpness of perception.
Prana is the subtle essence of Vata — the vital life force. It is what animates the body, what moves with the breath, what makes the difference between a living being and an inert one. In yogic understanding, Prana moves through channels called nadis, and its healthy flow is the substrate of vitality, enthusiasm, and the will to live.
"He whose Ojas is stable is not shaken by grief. He whose Tejas is clear sees without distortion. He whose Prana is full moves through the world without exhaustion."
Classical synthesis from Ashtanga Hridayam traditionsThese three subtle essences cannot be measured in a lab, but their presence — or absence — is unmistakable. A person with abundant Ojas walks into a room and the quality of light seems to shift. A person whose Prana is depleted feels heavier than their body weight. Ayurveda's deepest aspiration, beyond the treatment of disease, is the cultivation of these three.
Ayurvedic Glossary
Key terms you will encounter on your Ayurvedic journey.
- Abhyanga
- Daily self-massage with warm oil — nourishes tissues, calms the nervous system, and grounds Vata.
- Vikruti
- Your current state of imbalance, as distinct from Prakriti (your original nature). The gap between the two is where healing happens.
- Panchakarma
- Ayurveda's deep cleansing and rejuvenation therapy — a structured process to eliminate accumulated toxins from tissues.
- Srotas
- The body's channels — pathways through which nutrients, waste, and energy flow. Blocked srotas are a root cause of disease.
- Gunas
- Three qualities that govern all of nature and mind: Sattva (clarity), Rajas (activity), Tamas (inertia). Food, lifestyle, and thought all carry these qualities.
- Rasayana
- Rejuvenative herbs and practices that rebuild vitality, strengthen immunity, and slow aging. Ashwagandha and Shatavari are classic Rasayanas.
- Sattvic
- Pure, fresh, and light — describes food and lifestyle choices that promote mental clarity, peace, and spiritual growth.
- Nadi
- Subtle energy channels through which Prana flows. Nadi Shodhana (alternate nostril breathing) is a key practice for balancing them.
This is where the knowledge becomes personal.
Understanding Ayurveda is one thing. Understanding your own body through its lens is another. A consultation with Rahgvik translates these principles into a plan built entirely around you.