Guest guest Posted February 23, 2009 Report Share Posted February 23, 2009 Hello Dr. Sachin & others, The only question that remains in my mind, is that what is the source text which defines food in Sattva/Rajas/Tamas? Is there such text in Ayurveda, or do we have to look into yoga shastra, gita & purana for that? -Omkaarnath ___________ > Vagbhata, one of the most respected ancient Vaidya stated a > very special sutra ( statement ) . It is as follows : > " Vruddhi Samanae Sarvesham Viparitae Viparyaya ! " ...... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 25, 2009 Report Share Posted February 25, 2009 Here are some links where u can find some info about the qualities of food . http://satvikaahar.com/Satvikfood.htm http://www.ayurshop.com/diet/diettyppes.html If u want more accurate info , then u should switch to Jainism literature . It will tell u everything about the food . Faith is important to accept these criterions . Otherwise it will be very difficult to come to any conclusion . The debate will go on & on ... ____________ The only question that remains in my mind, is that what is the source text which defines food in Sattva/Rajas/Tamas? Is there such text in Ayurveda, or do we have to look into yoga shastra, gita & purana for that? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 25, 2009 Report Share Posted February 25, 2009 Dear Dr Sachin The links you give are just the opinions of their authors. I asked for the source text from where this concept of dividing food to S/T/R comes to Ayurveda. You mentioned the Jainist literature. Very good. Which particular text gives the first reference of food in releation to Gunas? More than that, I am interested if any vaidyas on this mailinglist remember any referencies in ayurveda shastras to the division of food in this manner. Or if we have to look into hathayoga pradipika, gherand samhita, and bhagavad purana for that matter. -Omkaar __________________ > If u want more accurate info , then u should switch to Jainism > literature . It will tell u everything about the food . Faith is > important to accept these criterions ............ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 26, 2009 Report Share Posted February 26, 2009 Hi Ossi, In all of my training - admittedly limited compared to some vaidyas - I have not come across mention of S/R/T in relation to food in ayurvedic texts such as Charaka Samhita and Ashtanga Hridaya. This is the main reason I question its relevance in Ayurveda. The old yogic texts, Hathayoga Pradipika and Gheranda Samhita recommend sweet, fresh foods; avoiding bitter, sour, pungent, salty foods including alcohol, fish, meat, sesame, mustard, hingu (asafoetida), garlic etc. This is a contradiction of the ayurvedic principle of eating all the six tastes daily. As far as I know (I have not directly read the Sanskrit text), there is no mention in the yogic texts of S/R/T in relation to food. There is a difference of 1,000 -2,000 years between the first ayurvedic texts and the more recent abovementioned hatha yoga texts. One external Hindu culture that I know of is Bali, which came under Hindu influence over 1,000 years ago. The Balinese are meat-eaters. This may indicate that ancient Indians were also " non-veg " . There do not appear to be fixed definitions of S/R/T. As one poster pointed out, they were originally considered qualities of the universe - each one neutral, equivalent, and essential for its functioning. In Chapter 14 of the Bhagavad Gita, however, Krishna relates S/R/T to mental attributes, portraying Rajas and Tamas as undesirable and thus inferior to Sattva. Charaka portrays Sattva as healthy mind, while Rajas and Tamas are mental aberrations, just like imbalanced doshas. One forum poster defined a sattvic person as one who is non-aggressive, while another poster defined a sattvic as a person of high intellect such as a scientist. One poster said that a person may exhibit sattvic tendencies while eating tamasic food, because of good past karma. This is an elegant argument, but is also based on the presupposition of karma, which itself is hard to define objectively. While there have been many passionate and fascinating posts, none has explained clearly the relationship between food and Sattva - however it is defined. There appears to be a presumption that certain foods are e.g. Tamasic, such as eggs, yet no satisfactory explanation of where that reasoning comes from. For some posters, " non-veg " diet equates to " non-sattvic " diet, yet this presumption is not explained. It is everybody's right to believe what their culture system is telling them; yet it is another thing to try and explain these concepts to the outside world. If Ayurveda is to become accepted as a reputable health system around the world, the concepts must be able to be defined in terms that are objective, and not merely based on belief. I feel the most promising post was Dr.Bhate's one in which he hypothesised that sattvic food is food that creates a specific effect on the pulse. We finally have a possible means of objective measurement, and a possible definition of sattvic food: if a food does not cause perceivable stress to the body, e.g. alteration in pulse, then it could be considered sattvic. This definition presupposes that the body has intelligence about its nutritional needs - whether chemical or subtle (pranic) - and therefore can signal that these needs have or have not been met by the foods - or that the foods are causing stress and therefore are not compatible with the body's needs. Following from this, it seems reasonable that all natural foods could be sattvic foods. Whether they do have sattvic effects depends on a number of possible factors: * being used to the food (satmya), through culture, upbringing etc * the quantity of food intake * the combination with other foods * the mental perception and attitude of the eater with regard to the food The Masai have been brought up drinking cow's blood, the Eskimos have been brought up on fish and seal fat, and Indians have been brought up eating chickpeas. Thus these foods are sattvic to them, and possibly not to other people. In fact, I have been told that northern Europeans cannot digest chickpeas. Having mushrooms (thought by some to be tamasic) can be sattvic if taken in small quantities - and in fact may have anti-cancer properties. Having chillies and garlic in small quantities (thought by some to be rajasic) can also be sattvic in small quantities, making the food more pleasurable and thus digestible - and they have powerful health-giving properties. Milk is considered sattvic, yet causes problems if taken with sour foods. Same with watermelons when eaten with most other foods. How a person views the food could determine how the food affects him/her. For a hunter who has to stalk his prey and kill it, eating meat may be sattvic for him. Research has found that the effects of foods which are considered " bad " , e.g. coffee, chocolate, etc., are different depending on whether a person feels guilty about eating them. Thus a person who does not like seeing animals killed should perhaps avoid eating meat, as the consumption of meat can have subtle mental effects that render the food stressful to the body. On the other hand, a person who eats such-and-such foods because they have been labelled " sattvic " , may not do well with those foods. I have seen quite a number of non-thriving and unhealthy vegetarians, and even yogis. This is why I do not give patients rules about food. I explain some ayurvedic principles of what could be good foods for them, and encourage them to assess for themselves how they respond to different foods. If they do this, they soon are able to judge what foods are suitable for them. I believe it is time to question our presumptions, and identify what are the truly essential principles of Ayurveda, so that Ayurveda can truly become a universal system of medicine. Best regards, Gerald Lopez Auckland, New Zealand www.ScienceOfLife.co.nz <http://scienceoflife.co.nz> _____________ > More than that, I am interested if any vaidyas on this mailinglist remember > any referencies in ayurveda shastras to the division of food in this manner. > Or if we have to look into hathayoga pradipika, gherand samhita, and > bhagavad purana for that matter. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 27, 2009 Report Share Posted February 27, 2009 Mr . Omkar . Always there is an Author of any text or literature written at any time . Will u tell them as their own thoughts scripted in that too ? The Jainism is also written by some Authors . U will interpret their words as their personal thoughts too ! I think , this matter should be stopped here ! As I wrote in the previous post , Faith is important in accpeting some things which cant be judged on the present science . Now it is ur concern to accept it or not ! ___________ The links you give are just the opinions of their authors. I asked for the source text from where this concept of dividing food to S/T/R comes to Ayurveda. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 28, 2009 Report Share Posted February 28, 2009 I have seen such debates in siddha texts too; honey is the saliva of bee; milk is the blood of cow; water in the pond is the saliva of fish. so this debate is endless for the 2000 years Vidhyasagar. _____________ The Jainism is also written by some Authors . U will interpret their words as their personal thoughts too ! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2009 Report Share Posted March 2, 2009 In this post, author expresses his thoughts on several issues recently posted in the list. The misconceptions about ayurveda need to be thrashed out, discussed and even debated, if that is the word more appropriate for these exchanges. Many students of ayurveda treat it as a science restricted only to three well known texts. If that was the case, many herbs and remedies which are not listed in those texts would be out-of-use. Posts by Yogi_nityanand bring out the correct philosophy on which ayurveda evolved. Many vaidyas who devoted their life to the ayurvedic practice, have added to the knowledge, and some researchers have tried to compile local practices by tribal vaidyas. For a serious vaidya, it is difficult to collect and digest all this knowldege in limited time. Academic studies in a limited time motivate philosophies as posted in Post#15486, challenging ayurveda to prove itself on predominantly western paradigm. The standard texts, while recognizing that health is balance of both body and mind, give more emphasis to body, the treatment of mind is indirect. One needs to turn to yoga, meditation etc. The conventional ayurvedic practitioners do not deal with these matters extensively, due to lack of time, and more specialized spiritual Gurus give this advise free. Practitioners, after all, are working for bread too. In past, author has posted how ayurveda has been discussed in many puranas and texts more ancient than Charak Samhita(Post#4632). The herb detoxification procedures using cow urine may have been the outcome of self urine therapy of Damar Tantra, which existed before ayurvedic texts. And to show that animals knew this therapy before humans, a MPEG clip file " MONKEY_UT " is posted in file section of group website, folder articles, subfolder Dr.BhateFiles. Author has seen cows and buffalos taking self urine using hairy end of their tail. When calf get injured, cow applies her urine on wound using her tail as a painting brush. Many anti-inflamatory, anti-pyretic herbs used in ayurveda may have been discovered by observing animals. The trees, animals insects are the source texts for much of the basic ayurvedic knowledge. The doshas of mind connect the science of ayurveda and yoga. One can substitute the word spiritualism for yoga in earlier sentence. The commentaries on ayurveda and herbal remedies by spiritual practitioners without studying Charak samhita or Ashtanghridya suggestive of subtle connections between two disciplines which are apparently distinct. Astrology opens up another looking glass to view the living world-universe interaction. But if one looks at the origin and need of ayurveda, it will be seen that it evolved as a need to give long life to the body, so that spiritual seeker is not bogged down by health problems. It is yoga practitioners, spiritual gurus who have contributed more to the satvic, rajasic and tamasic qualities of the food. On food, maximum contribution appears from Jain monks, though Hindus are not far behind. Many texts by Yoga Gurus available online prove this. Charaka Sushruta, Vagbhat were basically sage in search of spiritual perfection, and ayurveda was a bonus they may have obtained in their meditation. It is fruitless to search permanent classification of foods in S,R,T class. One important fact is that no food has permanent quality attached to it, since the way food is prepared or consumed, can also change its property, as written in post#13326. Food attracts spiritual vibrations and transforms itself. Hence there are musical compositions as well as mantras while milking cows, making ghee, making food for masses etc. Essential condition for food to absorb these vibrations is that its significant portion should be water, since water has maximum sensitivity to absorb spiritual vibrations [iron rules of Health posts]. Perhaps on this tune, even if an animal ate satvic food throughout its life, the meat obtained by killing it becomes non-satvic. The fear, stress and grief of the animal cause secretion of chemicals which get locked into its tissues. That is for science mindset. Same thing happens to humans too, especially when a mother is feeding the baby, the milk reduces satvic nature, if mother is under stress, grief, fear. Author was told by a mom that the taste of the milk changed after her menstrual cycles started and baby started showing the displeasure. Incidently, human breast milk is more satvic than Indian cow milk. The reason for this was hinted in post#9643. If a living body offers its life out- of-love or sacrifice, to the consumer or for the purpose of procreation of the specie, then there are no tamasic vibrations. That is the reason, fruits after ripening on tree itself are most satvic. The science of absorbing beneficial vibrations in the herbal remedies was exploited by Vaidyas by manufacturing medicines on particular lunar phases, e.g. Chandrakala netranjan discussed in post#1551,13142. Post#4283 brings out how vaidya use the natural rhythms of herbs to maximum. Can these qualities of herbal medicines be brought out in double blind randomized drug trials? Who will standardize patients for such trials. While ayurveda treats individual as a unique creation, how can we apply statistical laws for such arts of healing. Observe the style in which traditional vaidyas prepare individual mixtures, fresh juices or decoctions. The kind of ayurveda imagined/practiced by academicians and traditional vaidyas are poles apart. But if the present winds blow harder, soon we will have a multitude of journals, conferences and papers in heaps. More funds will be spent on researching ayurveda, rather than improving the spiritual/healing quality of herbs. More importance to the chemistry, ingredients rather than healing vibrations. This trend may be termed " westernization of ayurveda " , in sharp contrast to the traditional ayurveda practice presented in the movie http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=4697724121661222905 Satvic foods contain chemical ingredietns. which can cross the blood brain barrier. That is why they are intelligent foods, leave us satisfied, suppres cravings for sugary foods. They calms both mind and body. Adequate dose of such herbs directly stimulates the production of alpha brain waves, creating a state of mental relaxation and concentration similar to that obtained by meditation. Some chemicals in satvic foods, stimulate the release of GABA, a neurotransmitter that reduces anxiety and provides a sense of calm and well-being[Post#13868].. One can change tamasik herb/food to satvik by combining it with satvic ones. When garlic is boiled in ghee, its tamas softens and it becomes an anxiety medicine[Post#13868]. This statement is based on pulse test. Another example described in above post is Syrup of Garlic, an invaluable medicine for symptoms of anxiety, asthma, hoarseness, coughs and inflammation of the throat, chronic bronchitis, difficulty breathing and most other disorders of the lungs. When one is going through breathing difficulties, this state amounts to ending the life, if the attack is severe enough. Have you seen how a fish struggles to breath when the net is removed from water and fisherman collects the fishes trapped. When such food is consumed, our cells may be sensing those chemicals and reduce their insulin sensitivity. They mourn the death of the animal, in harmony. And slowly we start building up fat, a metabolic syndrome. The satvik foods also helps us increase prana, when it is getting depleted. The most satvic on this criterion would be air at the mountain top, having significant ozone percentage. That is the reason that most sage and spiritual practitioners are crowding Himalayan abodes. Lastly, author would like to say satvic food must create waves in the heart which make the person love the universe and every creation in it. This necessarily requires treating everyone at equal level rather than superior or inferior status. Growth, rather than death is the law of the nature. The fruits, honey were created so that some creature comes and eats the fruits/honey and causes growth (pollination, spread of seeds through waste matter). Nature had designed them to be eaten, to sustain the growth. Can one say same thing abot the animal getting killed. This satvic definition springs from spiritual ayurveda. Dr Bhate _________ There do not appear to be fixed definitions of S/R/T. As one poster pointed out, they were originally considered qualities of the universe - each one neutral, equivalent, and essential for its functioning. In Chapter 14 of the Bhagavad Gita, however, Krishna relates S/R/T to mental attributes, portraying Rajas and Tamas as undesirable and thus inferior to Sattva. Charaka portrays Sattva as healthy mind, while Rajas and Tamas are mental aberrations, just like imbalanced doshas. .... if a food does not cause perceivable stress to the body, e.g. alteration in pulse, then it could be considered sattvic. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 3, 2009 Report Share Posted March 3, 2009 Dear Vaidyas ! A lot of posts had been written on this issue uptill now . Dr. Bhate have elaborated the properties of S/R/T food in his own thoughts . The elaboration is good enough to understand some basic things as stated by him . But still there are some questions which are to be answered . > One can change tamasik herb/food to satvik by combining it with satvic ones. Does this statement say , tamasik food like Non - Veg food can be made Satvik , when it is prepared with Satvik ingredients ? eg If some type of meat is cooked with cow ghee , will it become Satvik one ? If alcohol is being drunk with added cow milk , will it too become Satvik one ? How will u express it by pulse diagnosis ? If there are 2 persons drunken alcohol , one with normal alcohol & the other one with alcohol with cow milk , will it be possible to tell this by just pulse diagnosis when u dont know the nature of alcohol they drank ? The qualities of tamasik food will never change . > The fruits, honey were created so that some creature comes and eats the fruits/honey and causes growth (pollination, spread of seeds through waste matter). Nature had designed them to be eaten, to sustain the growth. Can one say same thing abot the animal getting killed. Here I will state some difference . Nature have always differed the things in its own manner . There are always diferences in the things which are living things . As we know there are Herbivorous & Carnivourous type of living species . There are differences in these species as per their own lifestyle which is natural . Herbivorous animals have longer small intestine compared to the Carnivorous ones . Also the teeth in the herbivorous animals have less canines in their teeth compared to the Carnivorous ones . There should be some reason behind this type of design in the Carnivorous animals . The reason is they have to eat their meal ie meat of other animals . That made more canines in their mouth comparing to the herbivorous ones . There is one more difference everybody can see . Give water filled bucket to drink any Herbivorous & Carnivorous animal . See how they drink it . U will see big difference . Herbivorous animals always drink the water like human beings by gulping it sip by sip . Whereas Carnivorous animals always lick the water at the time of drinking . Nature have designed the food to be eaten . It is the real truth . But there is difference in the food for every living thing . Nature have designed the living things likewise . But today , the minds are changing towards lifestyle . Everybody want to change it & some justifications are given to implement it in everybody's life ! __________ In this post, author expresses his thoughts on several issues recently posted in the list. The misconceptions about ayurveda need to be thrashed out, discussed and even debated, if that is the word more appropriate for these exchanges. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 3, 2009 Report Share Posted March 3, 2009 Dear readers, Please find the input of Dr. Partap Chauhan below. Forwarded to group with permission of the author. -Omkaarnath ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Dr Partap Chauhan <drchauhan Mon, Mar 2, 2009 at 5:12 AM RE: What is the source text which defines food in Sattva/Rajas/Tamas? Ossi Viljakainen <ossi.viljakainen Hi Ossi, As per your question regarding SRT it requires some discussion to understand this whole concept. Ayurveda is not only limited to the books that are called “Ayurvedic” like Caraka, Sushruta etc. Ayurveda is a knowledge about mind, body, senses and soul and there are a lot of other books (other than Ayurvedic) which also talk about these subjects like Samkhya, Yoga, Vedanta, Bhagvatam, Bhagvat Gita, Upanishads, Vedangas and of course Vedas. Most of these books, including the Ayurvedic ones were written during the time when people followed majority of rules and regulations about eating and life style and had awareness of subtle part of the human being (mind, intellect, ahamkar, chitta and soul). That is why they have not elaborated much on these subjects in Ayurvedic books. In the Ayurvedic books they mainly describe about physical diseases and their treatments but in the sutra sthana they do talk about three types of diseases and three types of treatment including spiritual diseases and treatments. Another fact is that all these books including Ayurveda were meant to be taught and studied through a special process. This fact is very clearly recorded in all Ayurvedic books in the very beginning while they describe the descendence of Ayurveda. But nobody elaborates that and we do not pay much attention to that. If you read again you will realize why they only chose “Bhardwaj’ rishi to go to learn Ayurveda from Indra, or why did not Bhardwaj go to Daksha or Aswini kumars to study Ayurveda. All these stories have some deep meaning behind. Because Ayurveda and other Vedic knowledge were taught only through authentic “paramapara” only the authentic gurus could explain these things. I can tell you all these things because after studying 6 years in University I studied another 6 years under my guru and that’s where I realized that these teachers in the Ayurvedic schools can only literally teach what is written in the Ayurvedic books. Even the English translations of Ayurvedic books are just literal translations. So all this discussion about SRT although a very genuine discussion but we many not really find any book which talks about food divisions based SRT. In these ancient books they have written principles or sutras which the guru used to elaborate and depending on its meaning a list of things could be made. So we may only find very small discussion about what is sattva, rajas and tamas or what are the qualities/characteristics corresponding to each and based on this we have to make the classification. It is very similar to VPK where they describe the qualities of each but not necessarily the food classifications. Govinda Hari, Partap Chauhan __________ There has been very deep and detailed discussion about sattva/rajas/tamas in ayurveda-online mailinglist. I put forward a question that what is the original source text that introduces the division of foods into S/R/T as I had not seen it in Caraka Samhita.... Where does this concept originate from? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 16, 2009 Report Share Posted May 16, 2009 Dear readers, Please find the input of Dr. Partap Chauhan below. Forwarded to group with permission of the author. -Omkaarnath ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Dr Partap Chauhan <drchauhan Mon, Mar 2, 2009 at 5:12 AM RE: What is the source text which defines food in Sattva/Rajas/Tamas? Ossi Viljakainen <ossi.viljakainen Hi Ossi, As per your question regarding SRT it requires some discussion to understand this whole concept. Ayurveda is not only limited to the books that are called “Ayurvedic” like Caraka, Sushruta etc. Ayurveda is a knowledge about mind, body, senses and soul and there are a lot of other books (other than Ayurvedic) which also talk about these subjects like Samkhya, Yoga, Vedanta, Bhagvatam, Bhagvat Gita, Upanishads, Vedangas and of course Vedas. Most of these books, including the Ayurvedic ones were written during the time when people followed majority of rules and regulations about eating and life style and had awareness of subtle part of the human being (mind, intellect, ahamkar, chitta and soul). That is why they have not elaborated much on these subjects in Ayurvedic books. In the Ayurvedic books they mainly describe about physical diseases and their treatments but in the surta sthana they do talk about three types of diseases and three types of treatment including spiritual diseases and treatments. Another fact is that all these books including Ayurveda were meant to be taught and studied through a special process. This fact is very clearly recorded in all Ayurvedic books in the very beginning while they describe the descendence of Ayurveda. But nobody elaborates that and we do not pay much attention to that. If you read again you will realize why they only chose “Bhardwaj’ rishi to go to learn Ayurveda from Indra, or why did not Bhardwaj go to Daksha or Aswini kumars to study Ayurveda. All these stories have some deep meaning behind. Because Ayurveda and other Vedic knowledge were taught only through authentic “paramapara” only the authentic gurus could explain these things. I can tell you all these things because after studying 6 years in University I studied another 6 years under my guru and that’s where I realized that these teachers in the Ayurvedic schools can only literally teach what is written in the Ayurvedic books. Even the English translations of Ayurvedic books are just literal translations. So all this discussion about SRT although a very genuine discussion but we many not really find any book which talks about food divisions based SRT. In these ancient books they have written principles or sutras which the guru used to elaborate and depending on its meaning a list of things could be made. So we may only find very small discussion about what is sattva, rajas and tamas or what are the qualities/characteristics corresponding to each and based on this we have to make the classification. It is very similar to VPK where they describe the qualities of each but not necessarily the food classifications. Govinda Hari, Partap Chauhan _________________ There has been very deep and detailed discussion about sattva/rajas/tamas in ayurveda-online mailinglist. I put forward a question that what is the original source text that introduces the division of foods into S/R/T as I had not seen it in Caraka Samhita. ... Please see the following (quite lengthy) posting about this matter, and please kindly give your comments. http://health.ayurveda/message/15488 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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