Have We Been Looking at Cancer the Wrong Way?

While the modern world is still trying to understand the many factors that contribute to cancer, I feel like I may have understood something important through my experience with Ayurveda.   I am not saying this is written in any ancient Ayurvedic textbook. In fact, it is not mentioned in any of the Samhitas or classical Ayurvedic texts in the exact way I am going to explain it.   Nobody taught me this directly.   This understanding has come from years of observing patients, studying Ayurveda deeply, and trying to correlate what I see in practice.   And honestly, I just want to share my learning.   Whenever I asked my professors about cancer, they would say that cancer can be understood as Ojakshaya, which means depletion of ojas, or reduction in vitality and immunity.   Yes, that explanation made some sense to me.   But still, I always felt that there was something missing. There was no clear explanation about why cancer develops in the first place. No direct cause that was fully satisfying to me.   Over time, I started connecting dots on my own.   Let me explain this in the simplest way possible so that even if you don’t know much about Ayurveda, you will still understand.   Most people have heard about Vata, Pitta, and Kapha. These are the three doshas in Ayurveda.   Vata is mainly associated with the air element. Pitta is associated with fire. Kapha is associated with earth and water.   Now think about this carefully.   People who naturally gain weight easily, people who accumulate fat, people whose bodies tend to “build up” tissues, in Ayurveda, these are considered Kapha-dominant people.   Conditions like:   Polycystic ovaries (PCOS), Thyroid swelling (Galagandha), Diabetes, Fibroids,   all have strong Kapha involvement mentioned in Ayurvedic texts.   Why?   Because Kapha is all about accumulation, growth, nourishment, and building tissues.   In diabetes too, Ayurveda explains that toxins accumulate because digestion is weak.   Food is eaten but not properly digested, and over time, undigested material starts accumulating in the body.   In Kapha individuals, this accumulation tendency is naturally higher because their system is already more prone to storing and building.   Now here is where my thinking started becoming very clear.   What is cancer, fundamentally?   Cancer involves uncontrolled cell growth and multiplication. From an Ayurvedic lens, I began wondering whether this process could also reflect a tendency toward excessive accumulation and tissue build-up.   So logically, shouldn’t cancer also have a strong Kapha component?   Nobody taught me this directly. I arrived at this understanding by observing patterns repeatedly in patients.   And then I looked at modern research.   Today, modern medicine is increasingly talking about:   fasting, calorie restriction, not feeding the cancer, metabolic therapies.   You may have come across phrases like “starve the cancer,” often discussed in conversations around metabolism and cancer research.   And suddenly, it made sense.   Because in Ayurveda, the number one treatment mentioned for aggravated Kapha is Langhana.   Langhana means fasting.   It is eating less, lightening the system and decreasing accumulation.   When Kapha increases excessively, Ayurveda says the body needs reduction, not more nourishment.   And honestly, when I saw this parallel between modern research and Ayurvedic principles, it made complete sense to me.   Of course, our ancestors may have understood something this profound a long time ago.   Sometimes we assume ancient systems are primitive, but often they observed the body in incredibly intelligent ways.   Now, I want to make something very clear here.   I do not believe Ayurveda should replace modern cancer treatment.   Modern medicine is extraordinary when it comes to managing rapidly proliferating cancer cells. Cancer can spread aggressively, and modern interventions like chemotherapy, radiation, surgery, immunotherapy, these are fast-acting and lifesaving in many cases.   We cannot ignore that.   What we do through Ayurveda is different.   We work alongside modern medicine.   While modern treatment targets and destroys the actively multiplying cancer cells, Ayurveda focuses on reducing the internal environment that may be supporting that growth.   In simple words:   while one side is treating the disease directly, the other side is trying to reduce the tendency for accumulation.   That is where Kapha reduction becomes important.   Through this, we try to:   reduce excessive accumulation, improve digestion and metabolism, reduce toxins, support immunity, decrease heaviness in the body, improve overall vitality.   And more importantly, we focus heavily on reducing recurrence, slowing progression, improving quality of life and helping recovery.   This is not about “curing cancer overnight.” This is about changing the terrain of the body.   I openly acknowledge that my understanding may still be limited. Maybe my logic is incomplete. Maybe there are aspects I still do not understand.   But at the same time, I cannot ignore what I am seeing clinically.   I am seeing patients improve. I am seeing recovery happen beautifully alongside treatment. I am seeing people feel stronger, lighter, healthier, and more hopeful.   And for that, I feel deeply grateful.   Honestly, I feel like this understanding was given to me by the universe as a blessing. And I do not want to take that for granted. I want to acknowledge it with gratitude.   Because when you spend years studying, observing, questioning, and genuinely trying to help people, sometimes insights come quietly.   And I felt this understanding was worth sharing.   Even if this perspective helps one person think differently about their health, their lifestyle, or their healing journey, I will be happy.   I also want people to understand something important: Ayurveda is not only about herbs. It is not only about medicines.   It is also about understanding the body’s tendencies.   If the body is constantly in a state of accumulation, heaviness, sluggish digestion, toxin build-up, and excessive growth tendencies, then naturally we must ask: “How do we reduce… Continue reading Have We Been Looking at Cancer the Wrong Way?

Understanding Parkinson’s Disease: A Simple Guide to Symptoms and Support

Parkinson’s disease is a brain condition that slowly gets worse over time. It starts by affecting how you move, like making your hands shake or your steps slow. But it goes deeper, touching sleep, mood, digestion, and daily joys. Millions face it worldwide, often starting after age 60, though it can hit younger people too.   This article explains Parkinson’s in plain words. We’ll cover what it is, why it happens, how it feels, and ways to manage it. It includes standard care and an Ayurvedic view for balance. The aim is clear facts to help you or a loved one feel more in control.     What is Parkinson’s Disease?   Think of your brain as a control center. It uses a chemical called dopamine to send smooth signals for walking, grabbing a cup, or smiling. In Parkinson’s, special brain cells that make dopamine die off which cause signals to glitch, movements to turn shaky, stiff, or slow.   It’s called a progressive neurological disorder. That means it worsens bit by bit. Early days might mean a slight hand tremor when resting. Months or years later, balance wobbles or speech slurs. There’s no full cure yet, but early steps make a big difference in comfort and function. Most cases show after 60, but 5-10% start younger. It affects men a touch more than women.     Causes and Risk Factors   No one cause fits all. It’s often a mix:   Brain cell loss: Dopamine factories in the substantia nigra area shut down slowly. Protein clumps called Lewy bodies gum up the works too. Age: Biggest factor. Brain cells naturally wear after 60. Genes: Rare types run in families. Common ones slightly raise odds if relatives have it. Environment: Farm chemicals like pesticides, weed killers, or factory fumes link to higher risk. Other triggers: Head injuries from sports or falls. Long stress. Poor gut health may play a role via the gut-brain link.   Daily habits don’t start it, but skipping sleep, junk food, or no exercise can speed symptoms. Smoking oddly lowers risk a bit, though no one suggests it.     Symptoms and Effects   Symptoms split into movement ones and hidden ones. They creep in slow, then build.   Movement symptoms:   Tremors: Hands shake like rolling a pill between fingers. Starts one side, worse at rest, eases with action. Stiffness: Muscles lock tight. Arms don’t swing walking. Back or neck hurts. Slow moves (bradykinesia): Buttoning shirts takes forever. Face freezes—no big expressions. Balance loss: Lean forward. Freeze mid-step. Falls rise.   Hidden symptoms:   Speech: Voice soft, slurs, or trails off. Words chop. Thinking: Memory slips. Focus fades, especially later. Mood: Sadness, worry, or feeling blank hits 50% of people. Body: Constipation blocks. Blood pressure drops standing. Sleep fights, kick or yell in dreams. Smell weakens early. Fatigue drags.     Conventional Management Overview   Doctors focus on easing symptoms and keeping function: Pills: Levodopa turns to dopamine in brain. Others mimic it or block breakdown. They cut shakes and stiffness well, but effects shorten over years. Side wiggles (dyskinesia) can pop. Exercise: Walking, boxing, dance, or cycling build strength. Aim 150 mins moderate weekly. Therapy: Physio for balance. Speech work for clear talk. Occupational help for home tasks. Advanced: Deep brain stimulation zaps steady signals via wires for tough cases.       The Need for a Deeper, Structured Approach   Pills calm shakes today, but Parkinson’s is a marathon. Body ultimately tires. Nerves need ongoing food. Digestion matters, poor gut starves brain. Quick fixes fade fast.   A deeper plan looks at whole body: Nerves, gut fire (energy to tissues), habits. Months of steady steps bring real shifts, like smoother walks or less fatigue. Regular check-ins tweak as needed.   Ayurvedic Perspective on Parkinson’s   Ayurveda names it Kampavata. Vata is the body’s air force: Moves nerves, joints, breath. Too much Vata dries channels. Nerves stutter. Shakes and stiffness grow. Weak Agni (digest fire) builds Ama (gunk), blocking nutrients to brain and muscles.   Causes mirror life: Cold foods, late nights, stress, age (Vata rises natural). Ayurveda balances Vata gently, no fight, just moisten, warm, steady. It adds to regular care, not replaces.   Ayurvedic Management Approach   Simple layers build over time. Consistency counts, weeks give calm, months rebuild. Nerve support Gut fix (Agni) Food   Outcomes and Expectations   Steady care often brings: Speech clears Tremors quiet Memory firms Coordination lifts Energy up Around 98% feel overall better with time. Some see 80% less shake or stiff. But it varies: Early stage wins bigger. Age, stick-to-it, body type matter. It slows slide, boosts function.   A Structured Approach to Parkinson’s Care For those looking beyond short-term symptom management, a more structured and consistent approach to care can make a meaningful difference over time. We offer a personalised 3-month Ayurvedic support program for Parkinson’s, designed to focus on improving function, slowing progression, and enhancing overall quality of life. This is not a quick intervention, but a guided process that works with the body steadily. The approach focuses on supporting neuromuscular coordination, improving speech and daily function, strengthening digestion (Agni), and addressing underlying imbalances that contribute to the condition. Care is provided in a structured manner, including regular consultations, ongoing reviews, daily monitoring when required, and guidance from both medical and nutrition perspectives. In certain cases, specific Ayurvedic cleansing therapies are included based on individual needs. Over time, patients have reported improvements in areas such as speech clarity, tremors, memory, and overall coordination. In some cases, significant improvements in specific symptoms have been observed. However, responses vary from person to person, and consistency plays a key role in outcomes. This initiative is offered as a service-driven effort. There are no consultation or program fees, medicines are provided at subsidised cost, and any contribution is voluntary. For those exploring a more consistent and holistic way to support Parkinson’s, this may be one approach to consider. WhatsApp +91 99011 26331 for enquiries! (Consulations, Products,… Continue reading Understanding Parkinson’s Disease: A Simple Guide to Symptoms and Support