Eat Right For Your Dosha Type: Kapha
Once you’ve identified your primary Ayurvedic dosha or mind-body constitution, you can work towards achieving perfect health by eating to for your dosha-type. This could mean that you need to experiment with making a few changes to your diet that will help keep your body in balance. Of course, you won’t be able to stick to these guidelines all the time, but being conscious of your body’s natural tendencies is a great way to help control your moods, keep your energy up, and maximize your ojas, or vitality.
How to Eat for the Kapha Dosha
1. Eat warm, cooked, light foods with bitter, pungent and astringent tastes.
2. Avoid heavy oils and butters. Opt for lighter oils such as olive or canola oil.
3. Avoid caffeine in excess and sugars—try cutting down on the mochas and opting for tea instead.
4. Avoid heavy, congestive foods that are difficult to digest such as pastas, breads and cakes.
5. Eat plenty of dark leafy green and brightly colored vegetables like celery, carrots, spinach, and tomatoes.
6. Eat plenty of citrus fruits and berries. Drink citrus, fruit and vegetable juices.
7. Avoid more than three meals or snacks in a day and maintain a gap of at least four hours between meals.
8. Avoid high protein diets for extended periods—the lack of other nutrients will begin to set off imbalances in your doshas.
9. Sip a specially blended Kapha tea (available from health food stores) to balance digestion in the stomach and prevent discomfort during and after mealtimes.
10. Flush your system with water through the day—aim for at least 48 ounces.
11. Make sure that dinner is the lightest meal of the day and try to eat no later than sunset.
For more tips about eating right for your dosha type, check out Inner Beauty.
Image credit: http://www.sailusfood.com
Ayurvedic Rememdies For Colds & Flu
Cold and flu got you down? Turn to your Ayurvedic medicine cabinet to help you kick those flu blues.’
According to Ayurvedic medicine, the common cold results largely from an imbalance of the Kapha and Vata doshas. Vata (air-space element combination) imbalances lower immunity. This invariably leads to a build up of the Kapha dosha (water-space element combination) to compensate. However, Kapha mechanisms typically overcompensate to make up for the ‘dryness’ associated with imbalanced Vata and lowered immunity. The result is excessive ‘coldness’ that creates mucus. This in turn reduces your ‘Agni’ or gastric fire, leading you to have the ‘chills.’
Ayurvedic remedies involve using warming herbs and spices to help you break down and expel mucus while re-building your gastric fire. So, while the idea of a runny nose might not appeal to you, chances are that if you can transition from being ‘stuffed up’ to ‘blowing it all out,’ then you are well on your way to recovery.
My favorite herbs to remedy the common cold are tulsi (‘Holy Basil’), the universal immune booster and ginger which helps to ‘loosen and liquefy’ stuck mucus. Both are great for helping balance Vata and Kapha.
Try these simple Ayurvedic home remedies to unclog your ENT system and help you breathe easy.
1. Ginger and Tulsi Tea
Make a brew of tulsi and ginger herb tea and sip it every couple of hours.
As always, I recommend fresh ginger root and tulsi leaves. The former are easy enough to find at most natural food stores, the latter you can find with a bit of looking, or just order seeds and grow your own. Use 1 tablespoon of fresh herbs per 1 cup of water.
Alternatively, check out Organic India’s Tulsi and Ginger tea or Ayoma’s Kapha Tea. Both are made with dried tulsi and ginger.
Consider using honey not just to sweeten your tea but also to help soothe a sore and abrasive throat.
2. Herbal Inhalation Therapy
Inhalation therapy is an age-old trick for breathing in the potent powers of herbs and releasing mucus. It works every single time!
Boil 3-4 tablespoons of freshly grated ginger root and chopped tulsi leaves into a pan filled with a quart of water. Alternatively, add a 3-4 drops of tulsi and ginger essential oils into a quart of boiling water. When the decoction begins to release steam, remove the pan from the stove-top and bend over it to inhale the herbal steam for about 10-15 minutes. For best results, ‘tent’ your head and the pan with a large bath towel to prevent the herbal steam from escaping.
Resist the temptation to ‘sniff or swallow’ back mucus as it begins to decongest in your nose and throat. If you find that you are expectorating quit a bit, then take a momentary break from your inhalation therapy to blow it all out.
Image Credit: Creative Commons – Superhua

