Why High Blood Pressure Is Increasing in People in Their 30s and 40s?

  High blood pressure is no longer considered a condition that appears only after the age of 60.   Today, more and more people in their 30s and 40s are being diagnosed with hypertension, especially those with a family history of diabetes, obesity, cholesterol imbalance, or cardiovascular disease.   Many people believe high blood pressure is simply caused by stress or excess salt intake. While these factors do play a role, the deeper issue is often metabolic dysfunction, particularly insulin resistance.   Let us understand this in a simple way.   The Connection Between Insulin Resistance and High Blood Pressure   Our body produces a hormone called aldosterone.   This hormone tells the kidneys to retain sodium (salt). When salt is retained in the body, water also stays back. Increased water retention raises blood volume, and when blood volume increases, blood pressure rises.   Now here is where insulin resistance becomes important.   People with insulin resistance often have higher insulin levels circulating in the body. Elevated insulin can stimulate the retention of sodium and water, making the body more prone to developing high blood pressure.   This is why people with: Belly fat Weight gain Fatty liver High cholesterol Prediabetes Sedentary lifestyles   often gradually develop hypertension as well.   Ayurveda sees this pattern as a Kapha-dominant metabolic disorder associated with weak Agni, Ama accumulation, sluggish circulation, and blocked channels.   The good news is that Ayurveda focuses not just on controlling blood pressure numbers but on improving the underlying metabolic imbalance itself.   Ayurvedic Principles That Support Better Metabolic Health   Langhana, Lightening Therapy   One of the first approaches in Ayurveda for metabolic disorders is Langhana, or “lightening therapy.” The goal is to reduce overload on the digestive system and give metabolism an opportunity to reset. This includes:   Eating lighter meals Avoiding overeating Choosing foods that are easy to digest Reducing processed and heavy foods Allowing proper gaps between meals   When digestion improves, the body becomes more efficient at handling glucose and insulin. Cells begin responding better to insulin signals, reducing metabolic stress.   Simple dietary practices can often create profound changes in energy levels, bloating, cravings, and metabolic function.   Ruksha Ahara and Ruksha Upachara, Dry Diet and Dry Therapies   Kapha imbalance is typically associated with heaviness, excess moisture, sluggishness, and fat accumulation.   To counter this, Ayurveda recommends “Ruksha” therapies, dry and light approaches that reduce excessive Kapha.   Examples include:   Barley Horse gram Flat beans Millets Light legumes   Daily use of spices such as:   Turmeric Black pepper Dry ginger Cumin Mustard seeds   can help stimulate metabolism and improve digestion.   These foods and herbs support better cellular activity and reduce stagnation in the body.   Ushna Dravya   Cold, heavy, oily, and refrigerated foods tend to aggravate Kapha and weaken digestion.   Warmth, on the other hand, activates Agni.   This is why Ayurveda often recommends:   Warm water throughout the day Freshly cooked warm meals Warm herbal infusions   These practices improve circulation, digestion, and metabolic responsiveness.   Many people notice reduced bloating, better digestion, and improved energy simply by shifting from cold foods and drinks to warm alternatives.   Bitter and Pungent Tastes for Metabolic Cleansing   Ayurveda classifies tastes according to their effect on the body.   For Kapha-related disorders like insulin resistance and obesity, bitter (Tikta) and pungent (Katu) tastes are especially beneficial.   Bitter substances help clear metabolic channels and reduce excess accumulation.   Pungent substances stimulate digestion and circulation.   Examples include: Neem Fenugreek (Methi) Bitter gourd Turmeric Black pepper Garlic Radish Leafy greens   These foods support healthy glucose metabolism and improve digestive efficiency.   Vyayama, Movement and Exercise   Modern lifestyles with very little physical activity are one of the main reasons behind poor metabolism and lifestyle diseases today.   Ayurveda strongly emphasises daily movement to reduce Kapha stagnation.   Exercise helps:   Improve circulation Enhance glucose uptake into muscles Reduce insulin resistance Improve cardiovascular health Support healthy body weight   Strength training is particularly beneficial because muscle tissue improves insulin sensitivity.   Even simple daily habits like walking after meals, climbing stairs, yoga, or mobility exercises can create significant improvements over time.   Consistency matters far more than intensity.   Udvartana, Herbal Dry Powder Massage   Udvartana is a traditional Ayurvedic therapy involving massage with herbal powders.   Unlike oil massage, this therapy uses dry herbal powders to stimulate circulation and reduce excess Kapha.   Horse gram powder is commonly used for this purpose.   Benefits may include:   Improved lymphatic circulation Reduction in heaviness Better skin tone Support for fat metabolism Increased body stimulation   This therapy is often used as part of comprehensive metabolic management programs.   Swedana, Sweat Therapy   Swedana refers to therapeutic sweating or steam therapy.   Mild heat therapy helps mobilise accumulated Kapha in the body.   Benefits include:   Improved circulation Relaxation of stiffness Opening of channels Better elimination of waste Enhanced metabolic activity   One important precaution: The head should not be exposed directly to excessive steam or heat during the process.   Deepana and Pachana, Improving Digestion and Reducing Ama   Ayurveda believes that weak digestion is the foundation of many chronic diseases.   When digestion is impaired, Ama forms in the body.   Ama contributes to:   Sluggish metabolism Inflammation Weight gain Blocked circulation Reduced insulin sensitivity   Deepana therapies stimulate digestive fire, while Pachana therapies help in digestion.   This may include: Digestive herbs Fasting strategies Herbal teas Spice combinations Meal timing corrections   Once digestion improves, many metabolic symptoms begin correcting naturally.   Shamana Therapy, Balancing Kapha with Herbs   After digestion improves and metabolism becomes more active, Ayurveda may use herbal formulations to stabilise the system. This is called Shamana therapy.   Importantly, Ayurveda does not rely on random single herbs for complex metabolic disorders.   Proper treatment usually involves carefully selected herbal combinations tailored to:   Body constitution Digestion Sleep Stress levels Weight… Continue reading Why High Blood Pressure Is Increasing in People in Their 30s and 40s?

How I Treat PCOS Through the 3-Month Agni Awakening Program

Dr. Rekha explains her Ayurvedic approach to treating PCOS through digestion, Agni, food timing, and lifestyle correction.

One of the biggest mistakes I see today is that PCOS is treated as only an ovarian problem. I don’t see it that way. In Ayurveda, I primarily see PCOS as a disorder of Agni, your digestive and metabolic fire. And that is why in my practice, the treatment doesn’t begin with the ovaries. It begins with understanding your digestion, your lifestyle, your routine, your stress, your sleep, and your relationship with food. Before I tell you about my program, let me tell you what you can do starting today. Because healing doesn’t have to wait. Start Here, Right Now Sit down with a pen and paper. Write down everything you ate yesterday and when you ate it. Be completely honest with yourself. You will see it almost immediately. The skipped meals, the late dinners, the snacking, the chaos of it all. Now on the next page, write your ideal day. Make lunch your biggest meal. Make breakfast medium. Make dinner light. Assign actual times to each. And then commit to it. Find foods that don’t make you bloat, feel heavy, or give you gas after eating. You already know which foods those are. Your body has been telling you. Cook at home as much as you can. Keep the food warm, simple, and consistent. And move your body. Every single day. Walk, go to the gym, play a sport. Just move. Count your steps. At least six days a week, do some form of cardio. At least three days a week, build some muscle. Finish your dinner by 6:30 in the evening if possible, so your body has enough time to digest before you sleep. I always say discipline matters more than motivation. Motivation comes and goes. Discipline is what actually creates change. If you do just these things consistently, you will start seeing shifts. Your energy improves. Your cycles begin to regulate. Your body slowly starts remembering what it always knew. But if you want deeper support, if you want a structured plan, a team beside you, and three months of real transformation, that is where the Agni Awakening Program comes in. So What Is the Agni Awakening Program? It is a 3-month program built around one core belief: PCOS is a disorder of digestion, not just the ovaries. Because in Ayurveda, we say every disease begins with impaired digestion. When your Agni is weak, your body cannot process food, hormones, or even emotions properly. And PCOS is one of the ways that imbalance shows up. So everything we do in this program, every diet plan, every cleanse, every recommendation, is designed to rebuild your Agni from the ground up. The First Consultation It begins with a detailed consultation. Thirty minutes with me or one of my team doctors, and thirty minutes with my nutritionist. Before you arrive, I ask you to fill in a detailed medical history. And when we sit together, the very first thing I want to know is simple: What are you eating, and when? From there, we go deeper. How is your sleep? Your stress? Do you have bloating, gas, acidity? How are your periods? The flow, the timing, any spotting in between? As a doctor, I am also assessing your doshas, your saras, your malas, your indriyas. Everything is evaluated. Because in Ayurveda, nothing exists in isolation. Your digestion, your hormones, your emotions, they are all connected. And your diagnosis comes from seeing the full picture. The Diet and Why It’s Everything I want to be honest with you. 80 to 90% of managing PCOS is about the food you eat. Not medication. Not supplements. Food. But this is never a generic plan. In the first consultation, I give you initial guidelines. Then as the weeks go on, as my team gets to know you better, understands what you like, what your kitchen looks like, what’s realistic for your life, we build weekly menus specifically for you. We send recipes too. If I say eat biryani, I’ll show you how to make an Ayurvedic biryani. If you are craving something sweet, we make you a digestive brownie that is Ayurvedically compliant. Because I don’t believe in deprivation. I believe in transformation. And yes, my patients eat carbs at breakfast, lunch, and dinner and still get better. Because it was never just about carbs. It has always been about how well your body digests what you eat. What We Remove and Why Some foods look healthy but are deeply burdening for a weak Agni. Raw vegetables, cucumber juice, celery juice. They may seem light, but they can be very hard to digest. Buffalo milk is extremely heavy. Potatoes, capsicum, urad dal. These can be difficult to digest or highly inflammatory for some people. So we remove what is burdening your system. And when that burden lifts, something beautiful happens. It is not just your PCOS that improves. Your skin improves. Your energy returns. Your mood stabilises. Because you are coming back to baseline balance. You are coming back to yourself. Timing Is Medicine In Ayurveda, we say eat when you are hungry. But the truth is, most people today have lost touch with real hunger. Years of irregular meals, late-night eating, and constant snacking have confused the body’s signals. So for three months, I retrain your body. I want your hunger to be strongest at lunch, because that is when your digestive fire is at its peak. Medium at breakfast. Gentle at dinner. This is not punishment. It is your body being guided back to rhythm. And even the cleanses we do throughout the program are built around food. What you eat on day one of a cleanse is different from day two, which is different from day three. And we always end with Samsarjanakrama, a carefully structured post-cleanse diet that gradually takes your Agni back to strength. Movement, The Other 20% Insulin resistance is very real in PCOS. And one of the best ways to improve it is to build muscle.… Continue reading How I Treat PCOS Through the 3-Month Agni Awakening Program