The Ayurveda Experience June 11, 2016
What does Spirituality Have to Do with Healing Anyway?
”The root cause of disease is not listening to the body. Intelligence is the flow of awareness, that tells us what we should and should not do. To purify the blood means to listen to the intelligence of the body. A sensitive body is the abode of God. With a sensitive body, life becomes a ceremony, because it is the action of awareness.”
Dr. Vasant Lad, Textbook of Ayurveda, p.122.
How to boost spirituality, a question I am asked frequently. It’s a seemingly heavy one – the best way to answer is to simply share my personal story. To be spiritual, I believe it’s important to maintain a connection and belief in something larger than yourself.
The soul being one small gem of that larger consciousness, and by connecting with the rhythms of nature, we respect the larger force behind it.
Dinacharya offers daily routine and self-care practices for aligning ourselves with greater forces in order for our physiology to function optimally. The doshas, or the elements (Vata, Pitta and Kapha – Space, Air, Fire, Water and Earth) each rule a time of day. The qualities of these elements present more strongly during those hours, and those qualities can be utilized to our benefit. For example, during the morning between 6 and 10 a.m., is the best time to exercise to counter the effects of Kapha on our physiology, but during the evening between 6 and 10 p.m., we want to allow the heavier tendencies of Kapha to bring us towards sleep.
Another example, we want to eat our largest meal of the day between 10 and 2 pm midday, when Pitta (Fire) is the strongest, which optimally affects our digestive fire, or agni. Vata is dominant between 2 and 6 a.m. and p.m., and we can utilize the expansive quality in those hours to meditate or study.
Without going into all the details of dinacharya practices, I’d rather go into what the significance could be. When we learn and practice these things, we are literally aligning ourselves with the day – realigning our physiology with the movement of the sun and moon, and more. These universal laws, simply put, affect our being. As I said before, we can find better health when we are not fighting against these natural laws, but I can also subscribe to the idea that the microcosm (that’s us!) affects the macrocosm.
When we adopt self care practices according to these laws, we are bringing awareness to nature – or you might even say God’s rules – and respecting a revering her creation. The more respect and love we give to our self as simply a vessel, the more harmoniously we can live amongst others. The more self-love we practice, the better a channel we can be to the love all around. We can invite this energy flow with our intention and attention.
If we keep in mind that working on ourselves only serves to better the whole planet, I believe we can actually begin to take ourselves less seriously and see our daily self care practices as ritual devotion to the divine.
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