Ayurvedic treatment for depression, anxiety, and sleeplessness
One can be forgiven for feeling a little depressed and anxious, it's February, its lockdown, it’s as Pema Chodron often describes one of those times when we are nailed to the present moment. Depression often gets a bad rap in the culture, it’s something to get rid of at all costs, but having experienced it myself and knowing how shattering it can be I now understand its purpose and place in my life. I never really believed the idea that I was dealing with a chemical imbalance that could be corrected by drugs. This idea has never been proven and deep from my intuitive, female self, I knew that I am not just a physical being with malfunctioning chemical messengers, but a spiritual one and depression was my rite of passage towards this spiritual dawning of my essential self. I often ask myself would I have taken up meditation, acupuncture, Ayurvedic massage near me. Or more importantly, would I have reached out to others? Others held my hand, and gave me the sanity, and hope that I just couldn’t give myself.
I don’t for a
minute belittle the sheer hell of depression, but I feel that if we looked upon
it differently we could also care for it more holistically. Depression is as John Douillard so rightly says
a “mind that has driven the body into exhaustion in the name of control and self-protection.” This exhaustion in turn can lead to anxiety,
as the body and mind need the energy to stay calm and regulate moods. It is also as Francis Weller describes “our
unexpressed sorrows, the congested story of loss that when left unattended
block our access to the soul.” It is
true we live in a grief-phobic culture, where we are not allowed to show our
vulnerable, emotional, wild hearts.
This may
explain why 7.9 million people were prescribed antidepressants in the UK in
2018. The book "The Sedated
Society" gives detailed evidence to suggest that the chemical imbalance
research is both flawed and fraud, and shows how psychiatry is financially
indebted to the pharmaceutical giants.
From personal experience, I think medications can help when things are
really bad but I very much doubt they can ever truly heal, or get to the root
of the problem. They can also create
other side effects that make it harder to recover. There is also the problem of coming off
antidepressants which can be a difficult process, but with Ayurvedic Consultation London, this
process can be easier.
The symptoms
of depression vary from person to person, but general anxiety, insomnia, and
mental confusion are all present. From
an ayurvedic perspective depression, anxiety and insomnia are a sign of Vata
imbalance. Vata governs the mind,
nervous system, and pranic body. Vata is
ruled by wind and air and is the subtle energy that governs breath, and movement
in our bodies. This is why when our
breath begins to suffer our bodies and emotions suffer. The data energy is subtle, cold, light, and
dry, so to bring it to balance we need to ground ourselves with warm, soft,
heavy, and moist foods. Warm oils like sesame
oil and maharayanan oil are also used with massage to bring moisture, and
warmth to the body and to enliven the senses.
Shirodhara is another ayurvedic massage technique, where warm oil is
dripped onto the third eye, the pineal gland, and calms the nervous system and
the mind. Herbs that bring the energy
back to the digestive center also help, because when Vata is imbalanced it
triggers a loss of enzymatic activity in the metabolism and creates stagnation or loss of appetite.
Once the digestive fire is balanced, and the appetite returns the anxiety begins to calm, and the sleep becomes easier. Our bodies know how to sleep, but insomnia can become a mental obsession and the fear of it can keep us awake. The only way around this is to keep calming the vata, and accepting that there may be some lost sleep in the process. Acceptance and facing fear is the first step towards recovery. Keeping a regular daytime routine, not overstimulating the mind, and coming back to the breath also helps to keep data in check. Sleeping pills and sedatives can prolong insomnia because they interfere with the body's natural circadian rhythms.
Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner and
its plant medicine feel like a soft embrace in the arms of nature, just the
smells alone remind one that the earth is our mother. But ultimately depression is something to get
through and not rid of, it passes in its own time. It says I am going to demand that you slow
down, that you be still, that you cry that you open up. That you lean on people. That you let the sadness move through
you. That you fulfill the primary need of
connection and participation. There is
always a message, a newfound strength, deeper self-love, and compassion on the
other side of it.
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