What Ayurveda says about drinking water during food?

There are many ways advises on internet nowadays. Everybody is interpreting the shlokas according to their understandings and building some theory in support of that. Is anything available in Ayurveda about this? if so, what is that?

Ayurveda clearly describes the effects of drinking water during food intake. One should have water according to his necessity, whether he wants to be lean or obese or normal.

Acharya Vagbhata in his treatise Ashtanga Hridayam says

Sama sthoola krisha bhukta madhyanta prathambhupaa

that means, if water is taken before food, he becomes lean and emaciated, if water is taken dung food, it keeps the body in normal condition and if you have water after food, he becomes obese respectively.

So, here are a few tips for making the most of your new endeavor to practice yoga.

1. Plan for success. Set reasonable goals that will be easy to attain. Slow change is lasting change. Many longtime practitioners practice every day. But, they probably didn’t start that way. You’ll see benefits more quickly with three classes a week, but if you can only do one, do one. Start where you are. It took me five years to get to the point where I was practicing every day, but I started by doing it once a week. If I hadn’t started that way, I’d never have started at all.

2. Start with a beginners’ class. Or 10. If all goes well, you’ll be doing yoga for the rest of your life. No matter how fit you are, start at the beginning. The better teacher you find, the more likely that there will be some concepts that you didn’t learn in other exercise classes, like specific breathing and how to use blocks and straps for assistance. More advanced classes might not teach you the basics that will help you get the most from your practice.

Also, in a beginners’ class, everybody is a beginner! You’ll feel more comfortable not knowing everything, and the instruction will be better suited for where you are. Then, keep going to beginners’ classes until you feel very familiar with the things you learn there.

3. Play the field. Yoga classes and teachers vary widely. Many people try one yoga class, then decide they don’t like yoga or that they don’t like yoga teachers. One yoga class isn’t enough. If you go to a class that you don’t like, try another one. Get over it and move on. There is a class and a teacher out there that will be perfect for you.

4. Ask your potential new teacher what makes their class different from exercise classes. A teacher of any subject should be able to tell you what they teach. I frequently ask yoga teachers, in as friendly a way as possible, what qualifies their class as yoga practice. I am amazed at the variety of great answers I get. I am shocked, though, at the number of teachers who can’t tell me. They can’t identify yoga practice, yet they purport to teach it.

If you are looking to stretch, get strong, have fun, or have a social experience, you can do it all in a yoga class. But, all of those things can also happen in a spin class or a cardio class. Where is the yoga in a yoga class? It’s not your responsibility to know that yet, but a good yoga teacher will have a solid answer.

5. Ask your potential new teacher how they prepared to teach. There are too many ways to practice yoga for there to be one simple pathway that prepares you to teach. Many great yoga teachers are not formally educated, and many formally-educated teachers are not great. But, the teacher should be able to tell you how they prepared, whether it be via a structured course or not. If they don’t have a clear answer that gives you confidence in their knowledge and skills, look for other options. There are many great teachers out there. You’re important enough to have the best.

6. No mean yoga teachers! Is it too much to ask to be inspired? Fancy poses are impressive and fun to do and watch, but they provide no means for measuring the success of a practice. An authentic yoga practice of any kind, physical or not, eventually shows you the way to your soul. And as soon as you see it, you see the same in other people, and you treat them well because of that insight. If a longtime practice is working, the practitioner becomes kind and respectful to other people. You start to like people. Find a teacher for whom the practice seems to be working in the way you want it to work for you.

One thought on “What Ayurveda says about drinking water during food?

  1. If you are looking to stretch, get strong, have fun, or have a social experience, you can do it all in a yoga class.

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