New Scholarship for Advanced Studies in Vedic Sciences

November 30th, 2008

The Light on Ayurveda Educational Foundation (LOAEF) is accepting applications through July 1, 2009 for the First Annual Betheyla Scholarship for advanced studies in Ayurveda, Jyotish and Yoga. A $3000.00 scholarship for advanced studies in Ayurveda, Yoga and Jyotish will be awarded October 7, 2009.

This is good news for all students of Ayurveda, Jyotish (Vedic astrology) and Yoga who would like to attend a school or course to advance their studies in those vedic Sciences.

The scholarship was established to honor Betheyla Anuradha (1948-2007), a senior student of the Ayurvedic Institute and teacher of Ayurveda and yoga, as well as a Jyotish consultant and columnist for LA Yoga Ayurveda and Health magazine, who worked selflessly to spread the knowledge of these sciences in the West.

About the Scholarship:

Applications for this first award are due July 1, 2009. Their fund raising goal is $60,000 per year for two years to provide sufficient capital for sustainability of this important annual $3,000.00 award. They welcome your donation to this unique scholarship fund.

Visit their web site for more information and to download an application at: http://www.loaj.com/scholarship/scholarship_fund.html

Betheyla was a friend of ours from the Ayurvedic Institute, and we believe she would have loved to see this happening, so we are spreading the word…

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Ayurvedic Energy Drink to Start Your Day

October 13th, 2008
ayurvedic rasayana ojas energy drink

ayurvedic rasayana

This energy drink is a very healthy way to start your day and boost your energy. This is why we call it Ojas Drink. Ojas is the pure essence of all bodily tissues. It can be translated as immunity, but it also conveys the idea of vitality, energy and stamina. In a sense, all food’s ultimate goal is to become ojas to keep us alive and healthy. Of course, proper diet with wholesome foods and a balanced lifestyle, according to your Ayurvedic type,  will be more conducive to creating more ojas and promoting logevity. This is why you should start your day with this Ayurvedic Ojas Drink, which is a rasayana (rejuvenative) in and of itself.  Not to mention it is delicious!

Ojas Energy Drink Ingredients

3 to 5 dates (soaked overnight)
10 almonds (soaked overnight, rinsed well and peeled)
1 tsp. fennel seeds (soaked overnight)
1 tsp. ghee
1 pinch cardamom
1 pinch saffron
2 cups whole milk, soy milk, almond milk, or goat’s milk (or water)

First put the prepared almonds in a blender with a half a cup of milk and blend it till smooth. This is to make sure the almonds and dates get as liquified as possible. Then add the rest of the ingredients and blend it all again till smooth.

Get all your Ayurvedic spices at Ayurveda & Yoga Shop

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Office Desk Yoga Stretches and Eye Exercises

October 11th, 2008

If you are like most people nowadays, you probably spend way too much time sitting in front of a computer or desk, forgetting how important it is to stretch your body and rest your eyes to avoid stiffness and strain. If you observe animals, you’ll notice that they always stretch after being inactive, even after a nap. This is fundamental to move stagnant energy and blood, so here are some tips to get you started. These simple yoga stretches will keep you refreshed while you work and help with blood circulation and energy flow. You may feel heat circulate when you start doing them, especially if you are very stiff, which is a good sign that the energy is flowing and moving where it needs to go. Of course, you can keep adding some of your own favorite stretches.

To begin, sit on the edge of a chair with your feet flat on the floor about hip distance apart. Place your palms on your thighs, facing down, and feel the full length in your spine. Make sure your head is balanced over your heart and your heart is balanced over your hips, so that your whole upper torso feels totally centered. Relax your shoulders.

1. Inhale and exhale evenly and slowly for five counts each. Feel free to repeat these deep inhalations and exhalations as many times as you’d like, until you feel that your mind is “quieter.” With each inhalation, imagine vital energy (prana) coming into your body and filling it with light; as you exhale, imagine all your negative energy and sluggishness (tamas) come out and dissolve.

2. Inhale slowly, lifting both arms over your head and hold your left wrist with your right hand. As you exhale, bend your whole upper body to the right. Streeeeetch… and hold the pose there for three breaths. Make sure your spine and your head are straight, not bending down. Then inhale slowly and come back up to vertical position. Now change wrists, exhale, and bend to the left. Again, keep the pose there for three breaths. Inhale back up to a tall spine. Exhale, and release your arms to rest on your thighs.

3. Inhale, tilt your head to the right, as far as you can go, and hold it there for 3 breaths. Exhale while you move it back to center. Inhale, tilt your head to the left and hold it for 3 breaths. Exhale and move it back to center. Inhale, and move your had back, as far as you can go, and hold it there for 3 breaths. Exhale, move your head forward and keep it there for 3 breaths, touching your chest with your chin and stretching the back of the neck as much as possible. On an exhalation, move it back to center.

4. Move your shoulders in a circular motion a few times, rolling them up, back and down, and feeling your arms loose and relaxed on your thighs.Then switch the rolling motion to up, forward and down. On the fourth or fifth roll, interlace your fingers behind your back and keep your arms as straight as you can. Inhale, lift your chest, making a high back bend, and look up. Hold the pose here for 3 full, slow breaths into your body. As you exhale, release your hands, and place them on your knees. Round your spine, tuck your pelvis and pull your navel away from your knees, coming into a seated cat pose. Let your head dangle  and touch your chest with your chin to open the back of your neck while you breathe deeply and slowly.

5. From where you are, begin to move forward, letting your upper body drop through your thighs and stretch to  reach the floor with your palms flat. If you cannot reach the floor, hold onto your ankles or shins. Breathe into the pose, and let your head drop lower with each exhalation, until it is lower than your hips.

6. Slowly roll up and straighten your spine. On an exhalation, place your left hand on the outside of your right thigh and your right hand on the back of your chair, and twist your upper torso to the right, opening (lifting) your right armpit and chest area, and turning your head to the right as part of the twist as well. As you look over your right shoulder, move your eyes as far to the right corner as possible and keep them focused there. Then close your eyes as you untwist back to center. Repeat to the other side, and again close your eyes as you untwist back to center.

7. Open your eyes and move them toward the upper right corner, then the bottom right corner, then the upper left corner (in a diagonal line), and then the bottom left corner. Do this eye exercise 2-4 times and then close your eyes to rest them.

8. Stand up and on an exhalation, bend forward with your legs totally straight, and reach out to touch the floor with your palms, stretching as much as you can, feeling it on the back of your thighs. Hold the pose for 3 to 7 breaths. Then sit down, close your eyes and breathe deeply and slowly. Just let go…

Yoga of Perfect Sight

Yoga of Perfect Sight

And if you stare at the computer for long periods, it is highly recommended to do more eye exercises, which can be easily done any time and anywhere, to prevent more serious diseases down the road.

Yoga of Perfect Sight is definitely a must-have desktop companion if you work with computers or have eye problems. You can improve your vision and restore balance by simply stopping what you are doing and practice the exercises on a daily basis. Good for your eyes and good for the mind. Highly recommended!

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Spice It Up with Ayurvedic Spices

September 29th, 2008
ayurvedic Indian spices

Purchase Ayurvedic spices

Ok, so you want to start cooking and eating properly, according to your dosha or in a tri-doshic manner, and you like Indian cuisine. Well, if that’s the case, then you should have the Ayurvedic spices listed below in your kitchen cabinet.

Why, you ask? Ayurveda sees food and spices as medicinal substances and good digestion as one of the main factors to optimal health. So it emphasizes the importance of proper food combining and the fact that meals should have a balanced proportion of shad rasa, or six tastes. These six tastes —sweet, sour, salty, pungent, bitter and astringent— can be added to your diet through the use of culinary spices that will not only add a delicious flavor to your meals, but also help you digest them. This is one of the reasons why Indian cuisine uses these spices, as the Ayurvedic concept of shad rasa got integrated into the Indian culture. The other, of course, is flavor.

So here’s the list of must-have Ayurvedic spices:

  • Ajwan seeds
  • Bay leaves
  • Black mustard seeds
  • Black pepper
  • Cardamom
  • Cinnamon
  • Cloves
  • Coriander powder
  • Coriander seeds
  • Cumin powder
  • Cumin seeds
  • Fennel seeds
  • Garam Masala
  • Garlic (optional)
  • Ginger powder
  • Hing (Asafoetida)
  • Nutmeg
  • Onion  (optional)
  • Saffron
  • Turmeric powder

Other spices you might want to have around are: Fresh curry (nimb) leaves, fresh cilantro leaves, and fresh ginger root.

Masala dabba or Indian spice box

Purchase a Masala dabba or Indian spice box

And if you get a traditional Masala Dabba, or Indian spice box (like the one on the left), you can keep your spices fresh and handy on your kitchen counter next to the stove.

Enjoy!

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2008 NAMA Conference

September 28th, 2008
NAMA Conference 2008The New Frontier of Holistic Medicine
A Return to Wholeness in Healthcare
The annual NAMA Conference is an opportunity for Ayurveda and yoga students nationwide to come together as a community, for practitioners to enrich their knowledge by participating in continuing education programs and case study presentations, and for the general public to learn about Ayurveda and yoga, connect with new people, reconnect and meet friends and colleagues.

Where: Westin Hotel, Chicago, IL

When: October 16-19, 2008

21 sessions over 3 days taught by experienced and qualified presenters.

Educational Tracks include:
Integrative/Professional Ayurvedic
General/Individual
Yoga/Yoga Therapy
Jyotish (Vedic astrology)
Optional Support Sessions

Post Conference Sessions:
Ayurveda
Yoga/yoga therapy
Jyotish

Keynote Speakers:
Marc Halpern – Founder and Director of California College of Ayurveda
Roy Eugene Davis – Director of Center for Spiritual Awareness
David Frawley – Jyotish
Vasant Lad – Founder and Director of The Ayurvedic Institute

And:
An exhibition hall featuring an array of Ayurvedic products and services.
Annual Silent Auction with a wide variety of unique items. Find a bargain and benefit NAMA (all funds support NAMA programs).
Otherwise hard-to-find books in the Nataraj bookstore—reason enough to come to the event.
Book signings with prominent authors.
Special speaker presentations
Experience the healing power of sound with Russill Paul
A special menu prepared by two chefs working together to create delicious and nutritional meals that you will enjoy.
Morning yoga and meditation sadhana practices.

For more information and to register, visit the NAMA web site.

sharangdhar Ayurvedic herbs and herbal products

Sharangdhar Ayurvedic herbs

Visit our booth at the Conference. We will be representing Sharangdhar Herbal products, which we are distributors of in the US.

Treating the root cause of disease naturally…

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Welcome to the Ayurveda and Yoga Blog

September 21st, 2008

Welcome to the Ayurveda and Yoga blog, where you will find articles and comments about Ayurveda, Ayurvedic therapies, Ayurvedic herbs, Panchakarma, and other rejuvenating methods, Ayurvedic herbs, Ayurvedic recipes and tips, Ayurveda international events, yoga methods, yoga paths, yoga events, traditional hatha yoga and Ayurvedic yoga therapy, Vedic sciences such as Jyotish (Vedic astrology), gemstone healing, and more.

Your comments are always welcome.

Happy blogging!

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