Dr. Balwinder
Experience: | 6 years |
Education: | Shri Krishna Govt. Ayurvedic College Kurukshetra Haryana |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am an Ayurvedic doctor who’s been kinda deep into figuring how to blend classical healing with practical everyday fixes. I deal with all sorts of cases but really spend a lot of time on things like skin problems (eczema, acne, random rashes no one can name), sexual wellness—for both men n women, btw—and tough digestive issues like IBS, liver stuff, and even piles & fissure cases. Kidney-related complaints too, yeah, and a lot of chest n breathing-related stuff which’s getting pretty common lately honestly.
What I focus most on is not just giving some herbal mix and hoping for best. I like to go dig around a bit—like what’s really going on in the background, what’s triggering these issues again and again? That root-cause thinking in Ayurveda—it’s solid and makes sense, especially when things don’t show up clearly in tests.
Each person I see needs a totally diff mix—sometimes it’s more about food habits, other times I need to bring in Panchakarma or just correct timing of meals. Sometimes even emotional triggers come up during consult, weird how that links back to digestion, right?
I treat like a general physician too, in a way, 'cause I get people coming with everything from headaches to strange sleep pattern and they want a natural fix. I try keep things simple... understandable. Give a little diet guidance here, lifestyle shift there, and the right herb at the right time.
Even with long-time patients, I keep checking progress—coz healing ain't always linear and I want it to be something they can keep up with. Healing’s not just curing disease, it’s getting ppl back into their groove, feeling whole again. That’s the real aim. |
Achievements: | I am someone who's always drawn to the deeper side of skin n lung issues—not just like what’s outside or obvius, but what’s causing all that inside?? Over time, I kinda developed a knack for managing long-term skin probs and respiratory condtions with Ayurved tools that actually work when used right. Whether it’s eczema, psoriasis, chronic sneezing spells, I mix up herbs, detox, diet advice—whatever suits that person. This whole area sorta became my main focus without me even planing it. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with a little over 5 years in clinical practice and honestly, I still feel like every patient teaches me something new. I didn’t just get into Ayurveda by chance—it started with this quiet fascination with how deeply it connects body, mind n lifestyle. Over time that grew into a solid commitment to help ppl manage chronic issues and prevent future imbalances using a system that’s, well, old but really timeless in its logic. I work a lot with digestion-related probs, arthritis, stress-linked conditions, PCOD, menstrual irregularities n metabolic stuff like early diabetes or thyroid irregularities. My thing is to keep the diagnosis rooted in classical tools—like proper Prakriti-Vikriti analysis—but also make sure that the treatment fits into the patient’s everyday life. What’s the point if someone can’t follow it, right? Most of my plans are a mix of Ayurvedic herbs, detox (Panchakarma when really needed), some real talk about diet (Pathya rules do matter!), and nudging ppl gently into habits that their body-type actually needs. I’ve seen that when ppl start getting their doshas, they’re not just more compliant—they actually feel in control again. And that feels important. I also like to keep communication simple and to the point—no heavy Sanskrit unless someone wants to go deep into that. Just clear understanding, both ways. I want ppl to feel safe in my clinic, to feel heard, and to know that their issues aren’t “too small” or “too late” for Ayurveda. I guess over time that clarity and honesty helped me build trust with a lot of patients from diff walks of life. My learning hasn't stopped—I attend workshops and training updates often, esp around newer challenges where lifestyle is messing with body rhythms big time. But the core of my work hasn’t changed—stay authentic to the classics, keep things doable, treat the cause not just chase the symptom. Ayurveda’s slow, but it’s not weak. That’s something I remind ppl often. If we listen, the body knows how to fix itself—we’re just there to guide it right.