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Sexual Health & Disorders
Question #35535
81 days ago
540

Control Over Sexual Thoughts and Depression - #35535

Vinay manikpuri

Hy mai 18 years ka hu aur mujhe bhut jada sexual thoughts aate h jise mai control nhi kr pa rha hu maine control krne ke liye bhut kuch try Kiya running excercise meditation aur bhut kuch lekin mai kuch control nhi kr pata mujhe ak doctor ne Salah Diya ki tum ak bar sex kr lo fir tumhe ye problem nhi hoga Maine apne girlfriend ko pressure Diya jiske vjh se hmare bich duriya aa gyi aur mai dhere dhere depressed ho rha hu mai use control krne ke liye apne aap ko hurt krta hu jise mujhe chkkr aate h ab aap hi btayie mai kya kru ?

Age: 18
Chronic illnesses: No
PAID
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Doctors' responses

Dear Vinay Avoid addiction if any. Regular exercise and meditation. Increase intake of raw vegetables and fruits. Avoid pornography. Focus on your career. Cap. Brahmi 1-0-1 Follow up after 2weeks.

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Dr. Ravi Chandra Rushi
I am currently serving as a Consultant Ayurvedic Ano-Rectal Surgeon at Bhrigu Maharishi Ayurvedic Hospital, Nalgonda, where I specialize in the diagnosis, treatment, and long-term management of various ano-rectal disorders. My clinical focus lies in treating conditions such as piles (Arsha), fistula-in-ano (Bhagandara), fissure-in-ano (Parikartika), rectal polyps, and pilonidal sinus using time-tested Ayurvedic approaches like Ksharasutra, Agnikarma, and other para-surgical procedures outlined in classical texts. With a deep commitment to patient care, I emphasize a holistic treatment protocol that combines precise surgical techniques with Ayurvedic formulations, dietary guidance, and lifestyle modifications to reduce recurrence and promote natural healing. I strongly believe in integrating traditional Ayurvedic wisdom with patient-centric care, which allows for better outcomes and long-lasting relief. Working at Bhrigu Maharishi Ayurvedic Hospital has provided me with the opportunity to handle a wide range of surgical and post-operative cases. My approach is rooted in classical Shalya Tantra, enhanced by modern diagnostic insights. I stay updated with advancements in Ayurvedic surgery while adhering to evidence-based practices to ensure safety and efficacy. Beyond clinical practice, I am also committed to raising awareness about Ayurvedic proctology and promoting non-invasive treatments for conditions often mismanaged or overtreated by modern surgical approaches. I strive to make Ayurvedic surgical care accessible, effective, and aligned with the needs of today’s patients, while preserving the essence of our traditional healing system. Through continuous learning and compassionate practice, I aim to offer every patient a respectful, informed, and outcome-driven experience rooted in Ayurveda.
80 days ago
5

Take Brahmi vati 1tab bd, shankapushi syrup 20ml bd avoid thoughts concentrate on other works

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Sexual Thoughts: Samajhna aur Sambhalna Sexual thoughts tumhare age mein bilkul normal hain. Ye tumhare hormones, curiosity, aur emotional needs ka hissa hain. Lekin jab ye thoughts obsessive ho jaayein, toh unhe gently balance karna zaroori hota hai. ❌ “Ek baar sex kar lo” — ye solution nahi hai Sex kisi bhi emotional ya psychological problem ka shortcut solution nahi hota. Jab hum kisi ko pressure dete hain, toh hum apne aur unke emotional safety ko risk mein daalte hain — jaise tumne mehsoos kiya.

1.Saraswatarishta 15 ml with 15 ml water twice daily after meals 2.Brahmi vati 1 tab twice daily with water after meals 3.Ashwagandha churna 1 tsp at bedyime with warm milk

Lifestyle & Emotional Healing - Avoid: Pornography, overstimulation, junk food, caffeine. - Practice: Pranayama (Nadi Shodhana, Bhramari), journaling, early sleep. - Include: Tulsi tea, coconut water, soaked almonds, ghee. - Try: Creative outlets — music, drawing, writing — to channel energy.

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Thank you for trusting and sharing this Vinay , what you’re going through, is actually quite normal at your age but I can understand how uncomfortable and confusing. It feels when sexual thoughts come too often and you cannot seem to control them. It doesn’t mean there is something wrong with you. It just means your body and mind are an overactive face right now. You have a lot of energy inside you and it needs to be balanced, not forced down. When you try too hard to stop these thoughts, they come back stronger. It is like trying not to think of something-the mind keeps returning to it. The key is not to fight your feelings, but to come and redirect them

Avoid food that increase heat and restless like spicy, oily foods, tea, coffee, soft drinks Eat more cooling and grounding foods Like banana pomegranate watermelon milk with a pinch of cardamom, simple home cooked meals Drink enough water and avoid staying hungry for long period You can take Ashwagandha cap 1-0-1 Have a glass of warm milk with ghee before bed Sleep before 10 PM Avoid excessive screen time Take cold, shower at morning time Practice Pranayam, a meditation regularly When you get stronger, just do not panic, get up. Go outside. Drink cold water. Walk for two minutes. This will divert your mind. Stop hurting your that we doesn’t solve anything. It only makes your mind, weaker, and your body more sensitive. You are not a bad person You are just trying to manage something very naturally Instead of hurting yourself write down your feelings/ thoughts or talk to someone you trust What happened with your girlfriend - you acted out of confusion and desperation, not bad intention. Everyone makes mistakes especially when emotions are strong what matters now is how you learn and grow from not Real control doesn’t come from suppressing, it comes from understanding yourself calmly

Practice pranayama meditation regularly

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AVOID SCREEN AND ADDICTION TAB STRESSCOM 1-0-1

PRACTICE BHRAMARI PRANAYAMA REGULARLY

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DNT worry vinay ji:- stay cool and calm .do meditation regularly and take nervous relaxant AYURVEDIC medicine:-

Divya neuroghrit gold cap=1-1 cap before meal twice daily

Medha sagar ras=1-1 tab after meal twice daily

JYOTISMATI OIL=10 DROP MIX with milk and take bed time…

Pranayama=ANULOMAVILOM/BHRAMRI=10 MIN EACH…

AVOID SPICY/SOUR FOOD…

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Hello Vinay mujhe khushi hai ki tum apni problem ko samajh rahe ho aur use sahi tarah se handle karna chah rahe ho Tumhari age (18 years) mein sexual thoughts aana bilkul normal hai — ye body ke hormonal changes aur manasik vikas ka ek natural hissa hai. Lekin jab ye thoughts zyada hone lagen aur tumhare emotions, relation ya mental peace par asar daalein, to unhe sahi disha mein le jaana zaroori hota hai.

✅ Samajhne wali baat 1. Is age mein testosterone hormone bahut active hota hai, jisse attraction aur sexual urge badh jaati hai. 2. Loneliness, stress, guilt ya boredom in thoughts ko aur badha dete hain. 3. Suppression se problem badhti hai, control tabhi hota hai jab tum in thoughts ki energy ko constructive kaam mein lagate ho.

✅ Ayurvedic Medicines

1. Brahmi Vati – 1 tablet subah-shaam khane ke baad (Man ko shaant karta hai, concentration badhata hai)

2. Manasmitra Vatakam (Baidyanath/AVN) – 1 tablet raat ko dudh ke saath (Anxiety, overthinking aur depression me faydemand).

3. Ashwagandha Churna – 1 tsp gungune dudh ke saath raat ko (Stress control karta hai, man ko sthir karta hai.)

✅ Lifestyle Tips

1. Subah dhup me walk karo – sunlight se mood hormone serotonin badhta hai. 2. Pranayama – Anulom Vilom aur Bhramari 10 min daily. 3. Raat me Om chanting ya soft music suno – mind calm hota hai. 4. Porn, ya fantasy se door raho – ye man ko aur agitated karta hai. 5. Exercise daily, lekin bahut excessive nahi. 6. Balanced diet lo – doodh, ghee, fruits, moong dal, green veggies. ❌ Avoid spicy food, garlic, coffee, alcohol aur junk food.

✅ Manasik Control (Mind Rewiring)

Jab sexual thought aaye, to usse dabao mat — dhyan turant kisi constructive kaam me lagao (reading, workout, creative kaam).

Daily goal chart banao, apne din ko productive rakho.

Agar depression ya guilt badhe to kisi counsellor ya vaidya se baat karo.

Apne aap ko hurt karna bilkul band karo — ye tumhara self-confidence aur weak karega. Agar aisa urge aaye to turant kisi apne ya professional se baat karo.

✅ Night Routine

Mobile aur sexual content bilkul avoid karo. Kamre me soft light rakho aur deep breathing karo.

Yaad rakho

Sexual thoughts ko khatam nahi kiya ja sakta, par unhe sahi disha aur niyantran diya ja sakta hai. Tumhara goal ye hona chahiye ki tum apne vicharon ke malik bano, woh tum par nahi.

Wishing you a good health😊

Warm Regards Dr Snehal Vidhate

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Start with Ashwagandha churan 0-0-1tsp at bedtime with warm milk Brahmi vati 1-0-1 after food with water Do pranayam lom -vilom bhastrika bhamri 5-10mins daily twice

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HELLO VINAY,

WHAT’S HAPPENING IN YOUR BODY AND MIND At you age 18 years, the body produces a large amount of sexual energy under the influence of hormones. This is completely natural- everyone experiences it However, when this energy becomes uncontrolled or excessive and the mind keeps focusing on sexual thoughts, it leads to mental restlessness , guilt, anxiety and depression

In Ayurveda, this situation is called Vata- pitta prakopa with Ojas kashaya ", which means -VATA DOSHA = causes restlessness, excessive thoughts , overthinking -PITTA DOSHA= causes heat, strong desire, and irritability -OJAS (vital energy, responsible for immunity, strength and calmness)-> becomes weak due to overthinking, masturbation guilt, disturbed sleep, and stress

Over time, this imbalance leads to -excessive or uncontrollable sexual thoughts -weak concentration -mood swings and depression -self blame and guilt

TREATMENT GOALS -to balance vata and pitta doshas -to rebuild Ojas (vital energy, semen essence) -to calm and stabilize the mind (Manas shanti) -to strengthen the nervous and reproductive system -to promote self control ,confidence, and emotional stability

INTERNAL MEDICATIONS

1) BRAHMI VATI (with gold)= 1 tab twice daily after meals for 3 months =calms mind, improves concentration, reduces anxiety and restlessness

2) ASHWAGANDHA CHURNA= 1 tsp with warm milk twice daily for 3 months =rejuvenates body, balances hormones, builds Ojas, reduces stress

3) SHANKHAPUSHPI SYRUP= 2 tsp twice daily after meals for 3 months =nervine tonic, reduces excessive thoughts, improves sleep

4) JATAMANSI CHURNA= 1/4 tsp with warm milk at night for 2 months =calms mind, promotes deep sleep, reduces irritability

5) DRAKSHASAVA= 2 tsp with equal water after lunch and diner for 2 months =mild cooling effect, balances pitta, strengthens body

6) CHANDRAPRABHA VATI= 1 tab twice daily if there is excessive semen loss or frequent erections

EXTERNAL THERAPY

1) OIL MASSAGE= KSHEERBALA TAILA -warm oil slightly and massage entire body for 10-15 min before bath, 3-4 times a week =calms nerves, reduces vata, stabilizes mind, and improves sleep

2) HEAD MASSAGE= BRAHMI TAILA -10 min at bedtime, followed by lukewarm water bath in morning =reduces anxiety, promotes deep sleep, and help control thoughts

HOME REMEDIES

1) MILK WITH ASHWAGANDHA AND GHEE -mix 1 tsp ashwagandha powder +1 tsp ghee + a pinch of cardamom in warm milk- take at bedtime =nourishes Ojas and calms mind

2) SOAKED ALMONDS AND DATES -5 almonds + 2 dates soaked overnight, eat in morning =natural energy builder, reduces craving stabilize hormones

3) TULSI LEAVES -Chew 4-5 leaves daily or drink tulsi tea =purifies mind, reduces sexual urge, balances hormones

4) CORIANDER AND FENNEL SEEDS WATER -soak 1 tsp each in water overnight, drink in morning =reduces internal heat, cools body

LIFESTYLE CHANGES -wake up early before sunrise -take cool or lukewarm baths -read positive books, focus on studies or hobbies -spend time in nature or spiritual activities- prayer, meditation -keep social connective active -sleep 7-8 hours daily

DON’TS -avoid pornography and erotic material they overstimulate your brain -avoid late nights, spicy foods, alcohol, and overuse of social media -do not suppressss natural urges- urination, defecation, sleep, hunger -Never self harm- instead, when thoughts come, take deep breaths, go for a walk, or talk to someone you trust

YOGA ASANAS -padmasana= increases focus -paschimottanasana= controls sexual energy -sarvangasana= improves hormones baalance -halasana= cools down down and mind -vajrasana= aids digestion and control

PRANAYAM -Anulom vilom= 10 min balances vata and pitta -Bhramari= 5 min -Nadi shuddhi= clears mental blockages -Om chanting= 108 times daily, brings peace and grounding

DIET -fresh fruits= banana, apple, pomegranate, grapes -vegetables= pumpkin, bottle gourd, spinach, carrots, -whole grains= rice, wheat, oats -milk, ghee, honey in small amounts -spices= turmeric, cardamom, coriander, cumin

AVOID -spicy, oily, or junk food -onion, garlic, increase heat and sexual urge -coffee, tea, alcohol, and energy drinks -late night meals or overeating

Drink lukewarm water throughout the day- not too cold

Dear Vinay, what you’re experiencing is natural, temporary, and treatable . You are not “bad” or "abnormal " . You simply have excess sexual energy and emotional imbalance, which Ayurveda and psychological healing can correct beautifully

DO FOLLOW

HOPE THIS MIGHT BE HELPFUL

THANK YOU

DR. MAITRI ACHARYA

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Avoid chicken sugar and salt Eat almond soackd with water at night and take morning with 10 black raisins Do shirodhara with brami oil Do padabhyang Do matra basti mahanarayan 20 ml + brahmi oil +20 ml with mahatikta oil 10 ml + 10 ml castor oil at week 2 times Tab bhrami vati 2-02 Nasya do PANCHAGAVYAM PRODUCE 2 times day Take TAGAR CHURNA WITH 15 ml water + 1/4 tap HALDI AND MILK AT NIGHT AROUND 11 pm You give definitely results

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Depression and other disorders relatebd to the mind can only be treated when you make up ur mind to get rid of them.

❌ Try and avoid the trigger factors like pornography.

🧘‍♀️ Anulomvilom and Bhramari Pranayam will help. But you have to do it early in the morning only.

❌ Donot get yourself into any addictions.

❌ Donot drink tea or coffee or aerated drinks.

❌ Reduce screen time… No screen in darkness and 1 hour before you sleep. Consume audio form of data rather than visuals before you sleep. Filter the content of data you consume… Let it be spiritual or positive…

✔️ Drink a glass of buffalo milk daily before you sleep; it will help you get a sound sleep.

✔️ 100 steps after both meals are must.

✔️ Eat only home cooked food… Avoid outside food, packed and processed food.

✔️ Prefer natural liquids like fruit juice, coconut water, lemon juice, kokum sharbat over packed ones.

💊 Medication: 💊

Panchendriya Vardhan Tailam 2 drops in each nostril early in the morning empty stomach.

Cap. Memorin(S.G.Phytopharma) 2 caps twice a day before food.

Syp. Prasham 4 tsp at bed time with lukewarm water. Tab. Manasmitra Vatak 2 tabs at bed time.

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It’s common in your age to experience strong sexual thoughts, but it’s important to deal with them healthily and not let them take over your life. You’re already doing running, exercise, and meditation—these are really positive steps, even if they’re not showing immediate results. Keep it up, as they help over time.

When sexual thoughts feel overwhelming, learning to manage your energy helps. In Ayurveda, Bramacharya is about channeling sexual energy in constructive ways. With regular meditation, pranayama, practice mindfulness to bring more awareness to your thoughts, observe them without judgment, and let them pass.

Dietary considerations also have a role. Avoid hot, spicy foods, caffeine, and alcohol, as they can increase rajas, leading to unrestful mind. Emphasize sattvic foods such as whole grains, fresh fruits, veggies, and nuts, which can calm the mind and promote tranquility. Make warm milk with turmeric or ashwagandha before bedtime, helps in relaxing.

Start a consistent daily routine with early morning walks or yoga to stabilize vata energy. Vata can initiate anxiety or depression if imbalanced. Oil massage (self-abhyanga) with sesame oil before showering can also calm the mind.

Since you’re feeling depressed and harming yourself, please reach out to a mental health professional. It’s crucial to have support when dealing with depression. Therapy or counseling can provide tools and coping strategies. Avoid pressuring yourself with sexual activity to solve these feelings, as this might complicate emotions with your partner rather than resolve the underlying issue.

If dizziness persist after self-harm, please consult with a physician immediately for safety. Addressing these concerns with maturity and support is vital for your overall well-being.

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Sexual thoughts at your age are quite common, but it’s important to approach this with balance so it doesn’t affect your mental well-being. From a Siddha-Ayurvedic perspective, controlling sexual thoughts involves understanding your prakriti (body constitution) and managing the three doshas: vata, pitta, and kapha. These imbalances can cause agitation and restlessness.

Focus on practices that stabilize the mind and body. First, start with a consistent daily routine (dinacharya) to balance vata, which may be elevated with restlessness. Wake up and sleep at the same time each day, and include grounding activities like yoga and pranayama (breathing exercises). Specifically, practice Nadi Shodhana, which calms the mind and balances energy channels.

Your diet plays a significant role. Avoid excessively spicy or fried foods that aggravate pitta, which can enhance such thoughts. Introduce cooling and calming foods such as cucumbers, leafy greens, and coconut water.

Meditation is excellent, but it’s crucial to practice it regularly for 10-15 minutes in a quiet, peaceful setting. The process of focusing on your breath can significantly reduce intrusive thoughts.

Consider herbs that balance the mind and support focus, such as Brahmi or Ashwagandha. These can help clear the mind and improve concentration but consult with a qualified Ayurvedic practitioner to ensure they’re right for you.

Finally, if you’re experiencing symptoms of depression or hurting yourself, it’s important to speak with a mental health professional. Self-harm and depression can escalate, and getting help is crucial for your well-being. Address the root issues with appropriate mental health support alongside Ayurvedic practices.

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I am Dr. Sushma M and yeah, I’ve been in Ayurveda for over 20 yrs now—honestly still learning from it every day. I mostly work with preventive care, diet logic, and prakriti-based guidance. I mean, why wait for full-blown disease when your body’s been whispering for years, right? I’m kinda obsessed with that early correction part—spotting vata-pitta-kapha imbalances before they spiral into something deeper. Most ppl don’t realize how much power food timing, digestion rhythm, & basic routine actually have… until they shift it. Alongside all that classical Ayurveda, I also use energy medicine & color therapy—those subtle layers matter too, esp when someone’s dealing with long-term fatigue or emotional heaviness. These things help reconnect not just the body, but the inner self too. Some ppl are skeptical at first—but when you treat *beyond* the doshas, they feel it. And I don’t force anything… I just kinda match what fits their nature. I usually take time understanding a person’s prakriti—not just from pulse or skin or tongue—but how they react to stress, sleep patterns, their relationship with food. That whole package tells the story. I don’t do textbook treatment lines—I build a plan that adjusts *with* the person, not on top of them. Over the years, watching patients slowly return to their baseline harmony—that's what keeps me in it. I’ve seen folks come in feeling lost in symptoms no one explained… and then walk out weeks later understanding their body better than they ever did. That, to me, is healing. Not chasing symptoms, but restoring rhythm. I believe true care doesn’t look rushed, or mechanical. It listens, observes, tweaks gently. That's the kind of Ayurveda I try to practice—not loud, but deeply rooted.
5
767 reviews
Dr. Sara Garg
I am someone who believes Ayurveda isn’t just some old system — it’s alive, and actually still works when you use it the way it's meant to be used. My practice mostly revolves around proper Ayurvedic diagnosis (rogi & roga pariksha types), Panchakarma therapies, and ya also a lot of work with herbal medicine — not just prescribing but sometimes preparing stuff myself when needed. I really like that hands-on part actually, like knowing where the herbs came from and how they're processed... changes everything. One of the things I pay a lot of attention to is how a person's lifestyle is playing into their condition. Food, sleep, bowel habits, even small emotional patterns that people don't even realize are affecting their digestion or immunity — I look at all of it before jumping to treatment. Dietary therapy isn’t just telling people to eat less fried food lol. It’s more about timing, combinations, seasonal influence, and what suits their prakriti. That kind of detail takes time, and sometimes patients don’t get why it matters at first.. but slowly it clicks. Panchakarma — I do it when I feel it's needed. Doesn’t suit everyone all the time, but in the right case, it really clears the stuck layers. But again, it's not magic — people need to prep properly and follow instructions. That's where strong communication matters. I make it a point to explain everything without dumping too much Sanskrit unless they’re curious. I also try to keep things simple, like I don’t want patients feeling intimidated or overwhelmed with 10 things at once. We go step by step — sometimes slow, sometimes quick depending on the case. There’s no “one protocol fits all” in Ayurveda and frankly I get bored doing same thing again and again. Whether it’s a fever that won’t go or long-term fatigue or gut mess — I usually go deep into what's behind it. Surface-level fixes don’t last. I rather take the time than rush into wrong herbs. It’s more work, ya, but makes a diff in long run.
5
51 reviews
Dr. Manjula
I am an Ayurveda practitioner who’s honestly kind of obsessed with understanding what really caused someone’s illness—not just what hurts, but why it started in the first place. I work through Prakruti-Vikruti pareeksha, tongue analysis, lifestyle patterns, digestion history—little things most ppl skip over, but Ayurveda doesn’t. I look at the whole system and how it’s interacting with the world around it. Not just, like, “you have acidity, take this churna.” My main focus is on balancing doshas—Vata, Pitta, Kapha—not in a copy-paste way, but in a very personalized, live-and-evolving format. Because sometimes someone looks like a Pitta imbalance but actually it's their aggravated Vata stirring it up... it’s layered. I use herbal medicine, ahar-vihar (diet + daily routine), lifestyle modifications and also just plain conversations with the patient to bring the mind and body back to a rhythm. When that happens—healing starts showing up, gradually but strongly. I work with chronic conditions, gut imbalances, seasonal allergies, emotional stress patterns, even people who just “don’t feel right” anymore but don’t have a name for it. Prevention is also a huge part of what I do—Ayurveda isn’t just for after you fall sick. Helping someone stay aligned, even when nothing feels urgent, is maybe the most powerful part of this science. My entire practice is rooted in classical Ayurvedic texts—Charaka, Sushruta, Ashtanga Hridayam—and I try to stay true to the system, but I also speak to people where they’re at. That means making the treatments doable in real life. No fancy lists of herbs no one can find. No shloka lectures unless someone wants them. Just real healing using real logic and intuition together. I care about precision in diagnosis. I don’t rush that part. I take time. Because one wrong assumption and you’re treating the shadow, not the source. And that’s what I try to avoid. My goal isn’t temporary relief—it’s to teach the body how to not need constant fixing. When someone walks away lighter, clearer, more in tune with their system—that’s the actual win.
5
208 reviews
Dr. Shaniba P
I am an Ayurvedic doctor, someone who’s pretty much built her clinical journey around natural healing, balance and yeah—just trying to help ppl feel a bit more whole again. I work mostly with conditions that kinda stay with people... like joint pain that won’t go away, periods all over the place, kids falling sick again n again, or just the kind of stress that messes up digestion n sleep n everything in between. A lot of my practice circles around arthritis, lower back pain, PCOD-ish symptoms, antenatal care, immunity problems in kids, and those quiet mental health imbalances ppl often don't talk much about. My approach isn’t just pulling herbs off a shelf and calling it a day. I spend time with classical diagnosis—checking Prakriti, figuring out doshas, seeing how much of this is physical and how much is coming from daily routine or emotional burnout. And treatments? Usually a mix of traditional Ayurvedic meds, Panchakarma (only if needed!!), changing food habits, tweaking the daily rhythm, and honestly... just slowing down sometimes. I’m also really into helping ppl understand themselves better—like once someone gets how their body is wired, things make more sense. I talk to patients about what actually suits their dosha, what throws them off balance, and how they can stop chasing quick fixes that don’t stick. Education's a big part of it. And yes, I’ve had patients walk in for constant cold and walk out realizing it’s more about weak agni n poor gut routines than just low immunity. Every case’s diff. Some are simple. Some not. But whether it’s a young woman trying to fix her cycles without hormones or a 6-year-old catching colds every week, I try building plans that last—not just short term relief stuff. Healing takes time and needs trust from both sides. End of the day, I try to keep it rooted—classical where it matters but flexible enough to blend with the world we're livin in rn. That balance is tricky, but worth it.
5
148 reviews
Dr. Surya Bhagwati
I am a Senior Ayurveda Physician with more than 28 years in this field — and trust me, it still surprises me how much there is to learn every single day. Over these years, I’ve had the chance to treat over 1 lakh patients (probably more by now honestly), both through in-person consults and online. Some come in with a mild cough, others with conditions no one’s been able to figure out for years. Each case brings its own rhythm, and that’s where real Ayurveda begins. I still rely deeply on classical tools — *Nadi Pariksha*, *Roga-Rogi Pariksha*, proper *prakriti-vikriti* mapping — not just ticking symptoms into a list. I don’t believe in ready-made cures or generic charts. Diagnosis needs attention. I look at how the disease behaves *inside* that specific person, which doshas are triggering what, and where the imbalance actually started (hint: it’s usually not where the pain is). Over the years I’ve worked with pretty much all age groups and all kinds of health challenges — from digestive upsets & fevers to chronic, autoimmune, hormonal, metabolic and degenerative disorders. Arthritis, diabetes, PCOD, asthma, thyroid... but also things like unexplained fatigue or joint swelling that comes and goes randomly. Many of my patients had already “tried everything else” before they walked into Ayurveda, and watching their systems respond slowly—but surely—is something I don’t take lightly. My line of treatment usually combines herbal formulations (classical ones, not trendy ones), Panchakarma detox when needed, and realistic dietary and lifestyle corrections. Long-term healing needs long-term clarity — not just short bursts of symptom relief. And honestly, I tell patients that too. I also believe patient education isn’t optional. I explain things. Why we’re doing virechana, why the oil changed mid-protocol, why we pause or shift the meds after a few weeks. I want people to feel involved, not confused. Ayurveda works best when the patient is part of the process, not just receiving instructions. Even now I keep learning — through texts, talks, patient follow-ups, sometimes even mistakes that taught me what not to do. And I’m still committed, still fully into it. Because for me, this isn’t just a job. It’s a lifelong responsibility — to restore balance, protect *ojas*, and help each person live in tune with themselves. That’s the real goal.
5
1237 reviews
Dr. Nisha Bisht
I am an Ayurvedic physician with over 10 years of real, everyday experience—both in the clinical side and in managing systems behind the scenes. My journey started at Jiva Ayurveda in Faridabad, where I spent around 3 years juggling in-clinic and telemedicine consultations. That time taught me how different patient care can look when it’s just you, the person’s voice, and classical texts. No fancy setups—just your grasp on nidan and your ability to *listen properly*. Then I moved into a Medical Officer role at Uttaranchal Ayurved College in Dehradun, where I stayed for 7 years. It was more than just outpatient care—I was also involved in academic work, teaching students while continuing to treat patients. That phase really pushed me to re-read things with new eyes. You explain something to students one day and then end up applying it differently the next day on a patient. The loop between theory and practice became sharper there. Right now, I’m working as Deputy Medical Superintendent at Shivalik Hospital (part of the Shivalik Ayurved Institute in Dehradun). It’s a dual role—consulting patients *and* making sure the hospital ops run smooth. I get to ensure that the Ayurvedic care we deliver is both clinically sound and logistically strong. From patient case planning to supporting clinical staff and overseeing treatment quality—I keep an eye on all of it. Across all these years, my focus hasn’t changed much—I still work to blend classical Ayurved with today’s healthcare structure in a way that feels practical, safe and real. I don’t believe in overloading patients or selling “quick detox” ideas. I work on balancing doshas, rebuilding agni, planning proper chikitsa based on the person’s condition and constitution. Whether it’s lifestyle disorders, seasonal issues, chronic cases, or plain unexplained fatigue—I try to reach the cause before anything else. I still believe that Ayurved works best when it’s applied with clarity and humility—not overcomplicated or oversold. That’s the approach I carry into every patient room and every team meeting. It’s a long road, but it’s one I’m fully walking.
5
293 reviews

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