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  • Losing weight the Ayurveda way (part 1)

    Losing weight the Ayurveda way (part 1)

    The Ayurveda Experience June 10, 2015

    (Stay tuned tomorrow for the second half of this two-part series…)

    At our most recent Mudita Health Retreat, we had a lot of women come along who were concerned about their weight. They didn’t necessarily want to lose weight but they obviously didn’t want to gain any. They were power-walking every morning, didn’t miss a Yoga class and didn’t actually eat very much. We had more leftovers than ever before! Good for us, not so good for them…

    The boys were rather confused by this. Especially Doko. He thought that most people (like him) would set aside such concerns when faced with the sheer beauty and deliciousness of Stephen Galpin’s food! He just couldn’t fathom that fear of gaining weight could have more sway over someone’s mind than the joy of eating.

    But I totally understood. Despite maintaining a similar weight for almost 10 years now without thinking about it or ever having to diet, I can still remember feeling like this. For me, my fear of gaining weight was intimately connected to a fear of losing control…  a fear of not really knowing what to do… a fear of the inevitable deprivation that would ensue if I had to go on a diet… and a fear of the inevitable weight gain that would come again once I was off the diet!

    But Ayurveda saved me from all that. My fear of gaining weight has completely relaxed now because…

    If I do ever gain a little weight, I know exactly what to do about it (and I can lose it again as quickly or as gradually as I like – I usually choose gradually)…

    So I don’t ever feel like I’m losing control (so the ‘Control’ seed in my mind has also relaxed)…

    And the Ayurvedic way of losing weight doesn’t have to involve any hardship or deprivation (especially if you choose the gradual way).

    If you buy my LIVING AYURVEDA Course and get familiar with the information and the practices described in it, you will know exactly what to do too. But for those of you who don’t have it yet, here is a brief explanation…

    WHY WE GAIN WEIGHT

    The main law in Ayurveda to remember is ‘LIKE increases LIKE’. So, if your body is getting heavier, if you are gaining unwelcome weight, then it is likely that you have simply been introducing too many HEAVY qualities through your food and lifestyle.

    The really HEAVY and difficult to digest foods from an Ayurvedic perspective (in order) are:

    • Processed foods – especially those laden with trans fats, white sugar, white flour or high fructose corn syrup
    • Meat – especially beef, lamb and pork
    • Eggs – especially cage eggs
    • Cheese – especially hard, yellow cheeses like cheddar
    • Nuts
    • Wheat – especially in the form of highly processed yeasty bread and pasta
    • Yoghurt – especially highly processed and laden with weird ingredients
    • Milk – especially highly processed milk (homogenised) consumed cold.

    NOTE: I’d like to add alcohol to this list too. It may feel good at the time of drinking, but it is difficult for the body to digest (evidenced by the fact it doesn’t feel so good in the morning) – arguable more difficult than white sugar.

    If an excess of these HEAVY foods sneaks into your diet, then you will gain weight as a result.

    These foods are all difficult for the body to digest so if eaten in excess, they not only increase the HEAVY quality in the body, but they can also increase our level of undigested food wastes or Ama. As Ama builds up in the digestive tract, it hampers digestion further causing Variable Agni and eventually Dull Agni in our central digestive fire which, in turn, causes Dull Agni in our tissue fires or dull tissue metabolism. As a result, our fat tissue is not created properly and we produce an excess of immature fat tissue – of the stodgy, lumpy kind. At the same time, more Ama gets produced because we’re not digesting anything properly. This can easily become a vicious circle that is difficult to break if we don’t know how to build a stronger digestive fire. Luckily, thanks to Ayurveda, we do….

    OPTION 1: GRADUAL WEIGHT LOSS

    If you feel like you’ve gotten a little HEAVY, your pants are starting to feel slightly tight around the hips and you know it’s time to tip the balance back in the right direction, you simply need to avoid the HEAVY foods listed above as much as possible for a while and consciously choose lighter foods.

    LIKE increases LIKE so lighter foods will make you lighter. It isn’t rocket science. But you need lighter foods that will also be good for your Agni. Salads and low-fat foods are light, but they aren’t good for your Agni.

    LIGHT foods that are easy to digest, good for Agni and will help you to lose weight include:

    • Herbs and Spices – they’re not only light, they actually promote balanced digestion, especially ginger, turmeric, coriander, cumin and fennel
    • Split Moong Daal and Moong Daal Flour – the lightest, easiest to digest daal
    • Red Lentils – slightly heavier than split moong, but still super light
    • Veggies – especially green veggies (root veggies are obviously a little heavier)
    • Fruit – especially stewed apples and pears cooked with cloves and cinnamon and papaya (only eat between meals as a snack, not with meals)
    • Basmati Rice – the lightest, most balancing of grains
    • Millet, Raggi (Finger Millet) and Buckwheat – light and also slightly astringent so help dry out any excess fluid.

    NOTE: Yoghurt can be eaten prepared as Buttermilk or as a Buttermilk Curry. And, if you want a wheat substitute that is much lighter and easier to digest, try wholemeal Spelt flour. You can still have a little milk in porridges and in tea if you like (just choose organic/biodynamic and unhomogenised milk). You can also still eat nuts but just in small amounts – almonds that have been soaked and blanched are best.

    If you want to lose a small amount of weight in a gradual, undramatic way, start eating more home-cooked vegetarian meals from our cookbooks that use these ingredients… and avoid the ones that have little notes about being slightly heavier. Eating more soups for dinner and heavier meals at lunchtime is also advisable, if at all possible. If you do want to eat a little salad, eat it at lunchtime as part of your meal.

    To help your Agni along the way and eliminate any excess Ama, make sure you have a ginger tea in the morning before breaky and sip boiled water or herbal teas throughout the day too. This is a very, very important part of the process.

    And that’s it.

    The great thing about this gradual approach is you can make simple shifts without a fuss. There is no need for despair or dramatics. There is no need for outrageous diets or gruelling exercise regimes. And, the best part is, there is no need to give up fat or sugar (you can still have ghee and jaggery, in moderation). You just need to make small adjustments to get back into balance. And because it is so easy, you can do it as soon as your clothes feel a bit tight, rather than putting it off until you’re two dress sizes up!

    This is what I do. Anytime I feel slightly heavy (for my constitution), I try not to panic. Instead, I assess my behaviour…realise I’ve eaten too much HEAVY food lately… and then quietly cut back on chocolate, processed cookies (and make my own instead), cheese, pasta, bread, pizza, meat and beer for a while. I rarely eat these heavy foods but even I overdo them from time to time…

    The other good thing about this way of eating is that once you’re back in balance, you don’t have to avoid these HEAVY foods entirely. You don’t need to eliminate them forever. You just need to become aware of their qualities and make them a smaller part of your diet, rather than a larger part. A special treat rather than the norm. You can also learn how to prepare them in a way that makes them a little lighter and easier to digest.

    Tune in tomorrow for the second half of this two-part series, in which Nadia discusses a second option—fast weight loss—plus lifestyle considerations for losing weight.

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