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Dr. Feni Kanjibhai Mavani
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Dr. Feni Kanjibhai Mavani

Dr. Feni Kanjibhai Mavani
Shree Hari Ayurveda Clinic 📍105, National Plaza, 1st floor, Above Kabir restaurant, in front of Railway station, Surat- 395003
Doctor information
Experience:
3 years
Education:
B.A.M.S, Ayurvedacharya, (Govindbhai Jorabhai Patel Institute of Ayurveda &Research Center).
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly focused on keeping healthy ppl actually healthy—which sounds simple, but really, it's not. Everyone talks about curing illness, but honestly I feel prevention is where Ayurveda shines best. I look at their prakriti closely—Vata, Pitta, Kapha types—and guide them through daily routines, ahar-vihar changes, and diet shifts that match their nature. Not everyone needs the same “superfood” or sleep schedule.. it depends. That’s where my work starts. Now, when it comes to clinical treatment, I see quite a lot of cases related to joint issues—like arthritis, gout, even regular back or neck stiffness. Those things don’t just show up randomly. There’s a whole doshic imbalance or dhatu depletion behind it. I usually work through herbal support, local therapies, and sometimes light detox if needed. Panchakarma works well, but only if timing is right for that patient. Digestive troubles are common too. Gas, acidity, slow digestion, constipation or even frequent lose motion—all of these come back to Agni. I spend time helping ppl understand their patterns, then we start correcting things step by step. Ayurveda gives so many simple tools for that, but using the right one is key. I try not to just throw a bunch of herbs at it unless I'm sure it’s needed.
Achievements:
I am trained in Ayurveda Cosmetology—this kinda gave me a whole new way to look at natural skin + hair care. Like, not just applying things but actually correcting internal doshas that're showing up on the skin. I also learnt Agnikarma, Vidhakarma, Marma therapy, Panchakarma n Swarnaprashan during diff trainings, which gave me tools to go beyond surface-level relief. Each pt is different tho—sometimes we mix two approaches, sometimes one is enough. Just depends what’s actually going on inside.

I am practicing only Shuddha Ayurveda—no shortcuts, no fusions, no mixing things up with modern stuff just to make it faster. From the beginning I decided I’d stick to what the classical texts say. That means when someone walks into my clinic, I’m looking at their prakriti, vikriti, samprapti—everything that actually matters to figure out why the issue is even happening. I don’t like the idea of chasing symptoms. Doesn’t work. Never lasts. Right now I’m still early in the journey tbh, but even in these initial years I’ve treated quite a few cases—things like Amlapitta, Grahani, IBS-like gut issues, migraines, anxiety, insomnia... you name it. Most of them had already tried other stuff and came to Ayurveda more like a last hope. And yeah, it’s slow sometimes—but it works when you follow it right. Shodhana helps a lot more than ppl expect. Especially when followed up properly with Rasayana, correct Ahar, simple lifestyle fixes, and herbal meds that actually suit their dosha. I usually include Ritucharya, Dinacharya and even Sadvritta if needed—not just because it’s classical, but 'cause that’s how real prevention works. Not just medicines, but the daily little things we ignore until it builds up. That’s how we land in chronic illness in the first place. I read a lot—mostly Charaka Samhita, Ashtanga Hridaya... try to go back to them whenever something gets confusing or when I need grounding. There’s always something new to reflect on, no matter how many times you go through the same shloka. I don’t claim I know everything—I’m learning everyday. But I do know I won’t compromise on what Ayurveda actually is. Some ppl want quick cures, some want a pill. I can’t give that. But if someone’s ready to understand their own body, change a few things and trust the process—then yeah, we work together. And that’s where real healing starts.