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Dr. Batu
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Dr. Batu

Dr. Batu
N/A
Doctor information
Experience:
4 years
Education:
BAMS
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am working in Ayurveda from around 5yrs now, and in this time I sort of shaped my own way of looking at patients, sometimes mixing classical thinking with the day to day practical things people struggle with. I try to focus on core Ayurvedic assessment—dosha checking, agni state, small lifestyle patters they don’t notice—and I use that as the main guide for the chikitsa plan, even if I get a bit tangled in too many notes here n there. I am mostly drawn toward long-standing issues where people feel stuck, and I look carefully at their ahar, sleep, routine, all those tiny points that affect the body balance more than they realise. There are moments when I type too fast or miss a comma,, but I make sure my treatment direction stays grounded in the shastra principles. I am also quite particular about explaining things in simple words, not heavy textbook language, becaus patients open up more when they understand what is happening inside their system. My aim is to make Ayurveda feel usable, approachable, rather than some far away ancient rulebook. There are still days where I question if I’m doing enough or if I should study one more chapter before sleeping, but the experience of these 5yrs gave me a steady sense of how to guide someone gently toward balance—even if the journey moves slowly or gets a bit messy on some weeks.
Achievements:
I am always trying to keep my focus on patients well being, and maybe that’s the thing I feel most proud about, even if I dont say it much. I notice small shifts in their health, mood, routine n all, and I treat that as an achievemnt in my day. Sometimes I get confused with too many cases at once, but seeing someone feel lighter or calmer after chikitsa reminds me why I do this work.

I am an Ayurvedic doctor trying to bring the old wisdom of chikitsa into daily life, even if sometime I feel I am still learning new things every single day.. I work mostly with the classical principles, the ones I studied again n agin during my training, and I try to see how they fit with each patient’s prakriti and the tiny details of their health story. I am often thinking how Ayurveda doesn’t rush anything, it asks for understanding of the roga and even the rogi in a deeper way, and I keep that in mind when someone walks in and tell me their concerns. Some cases are simple, some not really, but I do my best to look at the ahara, vihara, dosha pattern and even the habits they don’t notice at first. Sometimes I get a bit caught up in analysing too many factors at once, or typing notes too fas and mixing commas,, but at the core I focus on using authentic Ayurvedic approaches—herbal formulations, routine correction, panchkarma suggestions where needed—and I try to guide people gently without overwhelming them. I am also aware that many patients come with doubts or half-heard ideas about Ayurveda, and I try to clear those without sounding too “doctorly,” just explaining what makes sense for their body. I want them to feel they can trust the process, even if progress take time or feel slow on some days. I am still growing in this field, and every person who comes to me reminds me why I chose Ayurveda in the first place: clarity, balance, and healing that respects the person as a whole. There are moments where I wish I had more hours in a day to study more granthas or revise a chapter I skipped, but I stay committed to giving care that is genuine, thoughtful and rooted in traditional practice—even if the journey gets a bit messy here n there !!