Why I am writing this to you…
I have spent decades sitting with people who are unwell.
Not just inconvenienced. Genuinely unwell. People with conditions that have names, diagnoses, years of medical history behind them.
Thyroid disorders, PCOS, IBS, chronic fatigue, autoimmune conditions, type 2 diabetes. People who have seen good doctors, taken their medications, followed the advice, and still wake up every morning not feeling like themselves. They come to me after all of that.
And the first thing I notice, almost every single time, is not their blood reports or their prescription history. It’s how they eat. When they eat. What they believe food is supposed to do for them.
Most of them have been told what not to eat. Very few have been taught how to eat.
That distinction has taken me a long time to understand, and even longer to be able to explain. I trained in Ayurveda. I have practiced it across countries, across cultures, across very different kinds of suffering. What I keep coming back to, no matter where I am or who I am sitting with, is that the gut is where almost everything begins.
Not just digestion. Immunity. Hormones. Mood. Energy. Inflammation. It starts there.
Ayurveda has known this for over five thousand years. What we are only now beginning to confirm through modern research, Ayurvedic physicians observed through careful, sustained clinical practice across generations. The gut is not just a digestive organ. It is the foundation of health.
When I write a dietary protocol for my patients, I am not pulling from a wellness trend or a nutrition blog. I am drawing from classical texts, from thousands of hours of clinical observation, and from the humbling experience of watching very sick people get measurably better when they change the way they eat and live.
This document is a version of what I give my patients.
It is not a diet. It is a way of approaching food with knowledge rather than anxiety. Every instruction here has a reason behind it, grounded in how the body actually works, not how we wish it did.
If you are dealing with a chronic condition, if you have been struggling for a long time and feel like you have already tried everything, I want you to read this carefully. Not because it will fix everything overnight. But because in my clinical experience, this is where real recovery begins. Not in a hospital, not in a supplement, but in the kitchen, three times a day, consistently, over time.
That is the medicine I am offering you here.
Ayurvedic Healthy Eating — A Personal Guide
Let’s start with something simple.
Food is your daily medicine. Not a punishment, not a restriction, just a way to come back to balance. And I’m going to walk you through exactly how to do that, one step at a time.
First, let’s fix your meal times.
I want you to eat at the same time every day. Your body has a clock, and your digestion follows it. When you eat irregularly, your gut gets confused. You get bloating, acidity, that heavy sluggish feeling. Sound familiar?
So here’s what I need you to do: don’t skip meals. Not breakfast, not lunch. Every skipped meal weakens your digestion a little more, and then you end up overeating later and wondering why you feel terrible. Let’s break that cycle.
Now, let’s talk about water.
I’m not asking you to force down three litres. Drink when you’re thirsty, that’s it. But please, switch to warm water. Cold water is one of the quiet things slowing your digestion down without you realising it. And during meals, just sip. Don’t flood your stomach. You’re trying to digest food, not dilute it.
Here’s what to cook with.
For fats, use ghee, coconut oil, or black sesame oil. These nourish you. For sweetness, reach for jaggery or mishri instead of refined sugar. Small swaps, but they make a real difference over time.
Please cook your food.
I know raw salads feel healthy. They’re not, not for a gut that’s already struggling. Raw food is cold, hard to digest, and creates gas. Cook your vegetables with a lid on, add cumin and a pinch of asafoetida, and your body will thank you.
For pulses, dry roast them first, soak overnight, throw away that water, then boil fresh with ginger, turmeric, and cumin. This removes the gas-causing compounds. It’s a few extra steps, but it makes pulses so much easier on your system.
For now, let’s remove a few things.
Just temporarily. Maida, soy products, cow’s milk, curd are putting stress on your digestion right now. Cheese and paneer, once a week at most. No deep-fried food, no packaged food with more than five ingredients on the label.
This isn’t forever. It’s just long enough to let your gut heal.
When you eat out, keep it simple.
Go for grilled or baked over fried. Avoid anything heavy, creamy, or processed. Warm and freshly cooked is always the right call.
And walk. Every day.
Ten thousand steps. It sounds like a lot, but it’s really just being consistently on your feet. Walking supports your digestion, moves toxins out, and clears your head in ways no supplement can.
The last thing I’ll say is this.
None of this works if you do it three days and then stop.
Healing isn’t dramatic. It’s quiet and cumulative.
Every meal you eat on time, every warm glass of water, every freshly cooked dish, it adds up. That’s where the change lives.
You don’t need an extreme diet.
You need consistent, aware, daily habits.
That’s Ayurveda.
And that’s what I’m asking you to try.
Love & Light,
@DoctorRekha