Persistent nausea can be caused by many underlying factors, including digestive issues, hormonal changes, stress, or food sensitivities. Determining the root cause often requires monitoring symptoms and working with a healthcare provider to identify triggers. Some common culprits include acid reflux, food intolerances, anxiety, or even dehydration. Keeping a food and symptom journal can help pinpoint foods or situations that worsen nausea. If nausea occurs with symptoms like weight loss, pain, or changes in bowel habits, it’s important to seek medical advice.
Diet plays a significant role in managing nausea. Avoiding greasy, spicy, or highly seasoned foods is crucial, as these can irritate the stomach. Bland, easy-to-digest foods like crackers, toast, rice, bananas, and applesauce (the BRAT diet) are often recommended. Ginger, in particular, has strong anti-nausea properties. Consuming ginger tea, candied ginger, or even ginger capsules can help soothe the stomach. Peppermint tea or peppermint oil aromatherapy may also reduce nausea. Lemon water or sucking on lemon slices can provide quick relief by calming the digestive system.
Hydration is key, especially if nausea makes eating or drinking difficult. Small sips of water, electrolyte drinks, or herbal teas throughout the day can help. Acupressure, especially using wristbands designed to press on the P6 (Nei Guan) acupoint, is another effective natural remedy for nausea. Ayurvedic treatments, such as drinking warm fennel or cumin water, can also be beneficial. For those who have managed chronic nausea, success often comes from combining dietary adjustments with natural remedies and mindfulness techniques, such as deep breathing exercises.
Nausea can definitely feel like a nuisance when it’s lingering, and you’re right in thinking it’s more of an indication than a disease on its own. When you’re trying to pin down the cause, it helps to observe patterns. You’ve probably heard ‘Vata’, ‘Pitta’, ‘Kapha’ – these doshas are key in Ayurveda. Nausea usually occurs when there’s an imbalance, mostly relating to Vata or Pitta disturbance, affecting your agni – digestive fire.
Since you’ve noticed greasy, spicy foods worsen it, reducing Pitta-aggravating foods might help. Avoid fried stuff, chillis, sour foods, even caffeine for a bit. Those crackers, bananas, rice - great choices! Add boiled vegetables, oatmeal, and you know, warm soups can be soothing too.
Ginger tea is not just a remedy; it works due to its ability to warm and balance the stomach. Grate fresh ginger, steep it in hot water for 10 minutes, drink it twice a day. That’s the way! Peppermint is cool, literally soothing Vata imbalance. Just inhaling peppermint oil before meals could ease your queasy feeling.
Hydration is key just as you mentioned. Sip warm water throughout the day, it aids digestion and calms you down. Breathing – deep, slow, belly breaths, like a gentle wave, can settle your system. Simple but effective.
Acupressure - the point called P6 or Nei Guan (around three fingers down from your wrist) when pressed can alleviate nausea. Press it for few minutes and see if it offers relief.
Herbal options from Ayurveda include hingvashtak churna – it boosts digestion. Mix a pinch with warm water before meals. Traditional spice teas with cumin, coriander, fennel - these keep your digestion fire strong.
Feeling better involves not only treating symptoms but balancing doshas, strengthening your agni. Try these, and be patient. Of course, if it persists or worsens, or if something just feels off, do consider getting checked out by a healthcare provider. They might help catch something you might not notice.
Keep exploring, stay curious. It’s a journey to find what truly soothes your body.



