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Dr. Vijaylaxmi
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Dr. Vijaylaxmi

Dr. Vijaylaxmi
My own clinic
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am very well practiced in Ayurveda, and sometimes I feel like the more I work with patients, the more layers of this science keep opening up in front of me. My focus is on applying classical Ayurvedic principles in a clear, day-to-day way—understanding dosha imbalance, tracking small shifts in digestion or sleep, and figuring out how each person’s routine affects their health, even when they don’t notice it at first. I try to keep the consultations simple but meaningful. Some days I pause halfway thinking *did I explain that too fast,* then I go back and adjust the wording, though a mispelt term or a missing comma!! still slips in when I’m typing quick. Ayurveda is detailed, but I make sure it doesn’t feel overwhelming for the patient. Working closely with different kinds of conditions taught me how important personalised treatment is. I look at habits, stress load, and the subtle signs the body gives, then shape a plan that actually fits someone’s real life, not some ideal version. I do rethink plans often—maybe too often—but that helps me stay careful and honest in my practice. My goal is to guide people through healing with patience, clarity and a bit of grounding, using Ayurveda in a way that feels practical and truly supportive, even if the path or my sentences wander a little along the way.
Achievements:
I am still in that stage where my achievements are more about the time and effort I am putting into my practice rather than big awards, and sometimes I feel a bit unsure mentioning it, but it’s honest. The time I invest in learning, meeting patients, correcting my own mistakes, rethinking a treatment plan twice… all of that is part of my growth, even if no certificate says it yet. I see this “time required” phase as my real groundwork, building slow but steady, with a few typos or misplaced commas!! along the way but a clear intention to get better each day.

I am working in this field for about 2 year now, and honestly those two years taught me more about real patient care than I expected at the start. At first I thought I understood how consultations work, but sitting across from someone with a mix of symptoms, doubts, half-told stories… that changes the whole picture. Sometimes I pause in between a case thinking *wait, did I catch that detail right or did my mind drift for a second*, then I go back and recheck my notes. In these 2 year I got used to handling common concerns, reading patterns in digestion, sleep, stress load, and seeing how small habits shape health in ways people don’t always see. My approach is simple—listen properly, observe the tiny signs, and make a treatment plan that isn’t too heavy or confusing. I do adjust things often, maybe more than I should, especially when someone’s routine doesn’t match the “ideal” plan from textbooks. But healing never moves in perfect straight lines anyway. I try to make patients feel comfortable sharing everything, even the small symptoms they think don’t matter. Many times those turn out to be the key. And yes, I still make silly mistakes like mispelling a word or missing a comma!! when I write fast, but the intention behind the care stays steady and honest. Two years may sound short, but for me they were full of hands-on learning—OPD flow, patient communication, treatment-follow ups, understanding what works and what needs to change. I learnt to slow down when needed, rethink a choice, and explain things in a way that doesn’t overwhelm someone already dealing with discomfort. I’m still growing, still refining how I connect Ayurvedic principles with day-to-day life, but these 2 year gave me a strong foundation to help patients in a way that feels practical, warm, and rooted in real experience, not just theory.