|
Ez Make Up
The Maharishi
Ayurveda Natural Medicine Approach to Beauty and Skin Care
The Maharishi
Ayurveda Approach to Beauty and Skin Care
The Three Pillars of Beauty
Maharishi Ayurveda (MAV), the modern, consciousness-based revival of the ancient
Ayurvedic medicine tradition, considers true beauty to be supported by three
pillars; Outer Beauty, Inner Beauty and Lasting Beauty. Only by enhancing all
three can we attain the balanced state of radiant health that makes each of us
the most fulfilled and beautiful person we can be.
Outer Beauty: Roopam
The outer signs of beauty - your skin, hair and nails - are more than just
superficial measures of beauty. They are direct reflections of your overall
health. These outer tissues are created by the inner physiological processes
involved in digestion, metabolism and proper tissue development. Outer beauty
depends more on the strength of your digestion and metabolism, the quality of
your diet, and the purity of your blood, than on external cleansers and
conditioners you may apply.
General Recommendations for Outer Beauty
As we will discuss, the key to skin care is matching your diet and skin care
routine to the specific skin type you have. Meanwhile, there are some valuable
recommendations for lustrous skin, hair and nails that will be helpful to
everyone, regardless of skin type.
1. Diet: Without adequate nourishment, your collagen layer thins and a kind of
wasting takes place. Over time, your skin can shrivel up like a plant without
water from lack of nourishment. To keep your skin plump and glowing:
A. Eat fresh, whole organic foods that are freshly prepared.
Avoid packaged, canned, frozen, processed foods and leftovers. These foods have
little nutritional value and also they are often poorly digested which creates
impurities that localize in the skin. The resulting buildup of toxins causes
irritation and blocks circulation depriving the skin of further nourishment and
natural cleansing processes.
B. Favor skin nourishing foods.
1. Leafy green vegetables contain vitamins, minerals (especially iron and
calcium) and are high in antioxidant properties. They nourish the skin and
protect it from premature aging.
2. Sweet juicy fruits like grapes, melons, pears, plums and stewed apples at
breakfast are excellent for the skin in almost everyone.
3. Eat a wide variety of grains over different meals and try mixed grain
servings at breakfast and lunch. Add amaranth, quinoa, cous cous, millet and
barley to the wheat and rice you already eat.
4. Favor light, easy to digest proteins like legume soups (especially yellow
split mung dhal), whole milk, paneer (cheese made from boiling milk, adding
lemon and straining solids) and lassi (diluted yogurt and spice drinks).
5. Oils like ghee (clarified butter) and organic, extra virgin olive oil should
be included in the diet as they lubricate, nourish and create luster in the
skin.
6. Use spices like turmeric, cumin, coriander, and black pepper to improve
digestion, nourish the skin and cleanse it of impurities.
7. Avoid microwaving and boiling your vegetables. They lose as much as 85% of
their antioxidant content when cooked in this way. Steaming and sautéing are
best.
Caring for outer beauty through knowledge of skin type
Besides these general recommendations the key to Outer Beauty is to understand
the difference in skin types so you can gain the maximum benefit from your
individualized skin care regimen. MAV identifies three different skin types
based on which of the three main metabolic principles (doshas)- present in
everyone, but to different degrees- is most dominant in your body.
Vata Skin
* Description: Vata is composed of the elements of air and space. If you have a
vata skin type, your skin will be dry, thin, fine pored, delicate and cool to
the touch. When balanced, it glows with a delicate lightness and refinement that
is elegant and attractive. When vata skin is imbalanced, it will be prone to
excessive dryness and may even be rough and flaky.
* Potential problems: The greatest beauty challenge for vata skin is its
predisposition to symptoms of early aging. Your skin may tend to develop
wrinkles earlier than most due to its tendency to dryness and thinness. If your
digestion is not in balance, your skin can begin to look dull and grayish, even
in your 20’s and 30’s. In addition, your skin may have a tendency for disorders
such as dry eczema and skin fungus. Mental stress, such as worry, fear and lack
of sleep, has a powerful debilitating effect on vata skin leaving it looking
tired and lifeless.
* Recommendations for care
With a little knowledge, you can preserve and protect the delicate beauty of
your vata type skin. Since your skin does not contain much moisture, preventing
it from drying is the major consideration. Eat a warm, unctuous diet (ghee and
olive oil are best) and favor sour, salty and sweet tastes (naturally sweet like
fruits, not refined sugar) as they balance vata. Avoid drying foods like
crackers. Drink 6-8 glasses of warm (not cold for vata types!) water throughout
the day and eat plenty of sweet, juicy fruits. Going to bed early (before 10 PM)
is very soothing to vata and will have a tremendously positive influence on your
skin. Avoid cleansing products that dry the skin (like alcohol-based cleansers)
and perform Ayurvedic oil massage to your whole body (abhyanga) in the morning
before you shower.
Pitta Skin.
* Description: Pitta dosha is composed of the elements of fire and water. If you
have a pitta skin type your skin is fair, soft, warm and of medium thickness.
When balanced, your skin has a beautiful, slightly rosy or golden glow, as if
illuminated from within. Your hair typically is fine and straight, and is
usually red, sandy or blonde in color. Your complexion tends toward the pink or
reddish, and there is often a copious amount of freckles or moles.
* Potential problems: Among the many beauty challenges of pitta skin types is
your tendency to develop rashes, rosacea, acne, liver spots or pigment
disorders. Because of the large proportion of the fire element in your
constitution, your skin does not tolerate heat or sun very well. Of all the
three skin types, pitta skin has the least tolerance for the sun, is
photosensitive, and most likely to accumulate sun damage over the years. Pitta
skin is aggravated by emotional stress, especially suppressed anger,
frustration, or resentment.
* Recommendations for care
Avoid excessive sunlight, tanning treatments and highly heating therapies like
facial or whole body steams. Avoid hot, spicy foods and favor astringent, bitter
and sweet foods which balance pitta. (Again, naturally sweet, not chocolate and
refined sugar!) Sweet juicy fruits (especially melons and pears), cooked greens
and rose petal preserves are especially good. Drinking plenty of water helps
wash impurities from sensitive pitta skin. Reduce external or internal contact
with synthetic chemicals, to which your skin is especially prone to react, even
in a delayed fashion after years of seemingly uneventful use. Avoid skin
products that are abrasive, heating or contain artificial colors or
preservatives. Most commercial make-up
brands should be avoided in favor of strictly 100%
natural ingredient cosmetics. And be sure to get your emotional stress under
control through plenty of outdoor exercise, yoga and meditation.
Kapha Skin.
* Description: Kapha dosha is composed of the elements of earth and water. If
you have a kapha skin type your skin is thick, oily, soft and cool to the touch.
Your complexion is a glowing porcelain whitish color, like the moon, and hair
characteristically thick, wavy, oily and dark. Kapha skin types, with their more
generous collagen and connective tissue, are fortunate to develop
wrinkles much later in life than vata or
pitta types.
*Potential problems If your skin becomes imbalanced, it can show up as enlarged
pores, excessively oily skin, moist types of eczema, blackheads, acne or
pimples, and water retention. Kapha skin is also more prone to fungal
infections.
* Recommendations for care
Kapha skin is more prone to clogging and needs more cleansing than other skin
types. Be careful to avoid greasy, clogging creams. Likewise, avoid heavy, hard
to digest foods like fried foods, fatty meats, cheeses and rich desserts. Eat
more light, easy to digest, astringent, bitter and pungent (well-spiced) foods
as they balance kapha. Olive oil is the best cooking oil and a little ginger and
lime juice can be taken before meals to increase your characteristically
sluggish digestive fire. Take warm baths often and use gentle cleansers to open
the skin pores. Avoid getting constipated and try to get some exercise every day
to increase circulation and help purify the skin through the sweating process.
Inner Beauty: Gunam.
Happy, positive, loving, caring individuals have a special beauty that is far
more than skin deep. Conversely we all experience the quick and deleterious
effect on our skin from fatigue and stress.
Inner beauty is authentic beauty, not the kind that shows on a made-up face, but
the kind that shines through from your soul, your consciousness or inner state
of being. Inner beauty comes from a mind and heart that are in harmony, not at
odds with each other, causing emotional confusion, loss of confidence, stress
and worry. Inner peace is the foundation of outer beauty.
Maintain your self-confidence and a warm, loving personality by paying attention
to your lifestyle and daily routine and effective management of stress (I highly
recommend the TM technique for its scientifically-verified benefits on mental
and physical health and reduced aging.) You will also be healthier and feel
better through the day if you eat your main meal at midday and make a habit of
going to bed early (by 10 PM is ideal.)
Remember, kindness, friendliness and sincerity naturally attract people to you.
On the other hand, being uptight or tense makes people want to walk the other
way, regardless of your facial structure, body weight, or other outer signs we
associate with attractiveness.
Lasting Beauty: Yayastyag
In order to slow the aging process and gain lasting beauty there are two
additional key considerations beyond those already discussed,
1. Eliminate toxins and free radicals in the body: The main deteriorating
effects of aging come as toxins and impurities (called ama in Ayurveda)
accumulate throughout the body. These toxins may begin as free radicals in the
body, or over time may become oxidized into free radicals, all of which
contribute to premature aging in the body. For lasting health and beauty it is
essential to avoid and neutralize free radicals, to prevent impurities of all
kinds from accumulating and to remove those that have already become lodged in
the body.
The most powerful cleansing therapy in Maharishi Ayurveda is "panchakarma"
therapy, a series of natural treatments ideally performed twice yearly, that
involves 5-7 days in a row of massage, heat treatments and mild herbal enemas.
Ayurveda emphasizes the importance of undergoing this cleansing program once or
twice a year to prevent impurities from accumulating, localizing and hardening
in the tissues. Just as we change the oil in our cars regularly for optimal
performance and lifespan, Ayurveda recommends that we cleanse the “sludge” from
our tissues on a regular basis through panchakarma treatments.
Best of all, panchakarma treatments are luxurious, blissful, and make you feel
(and look) completely rejuvenated in just a few days time. I have had many a
patient who told me that friends asked them afterwards if they had gotten a
facelift, they looked so fresh and youthful!
Other free radical busters include: reducing mental stress, eating antioxidant
foods like leafy green vegetables, sweet, juicy fruits and cooking on a daily
basis with antioxidant, detoxifying spices like turmeric and coriander.
2. Add rejuvenative techniques to daily living:
The daily activities of life in the modern world systematically wear us down and
speed up the aging process. Ayurveda maintains it is crucial to practice daily
rejuvenative regimens to counteract the stressful wear and tear of everyday
life. According to Ayurveda the most important rejuvenative routines for your
life are:
a) Going to bed by 10:00 PM. This simple habit is one of the most powerful
techniques for health and longevity, according to MAV.
b) Meditate daily. Any meditation that does not involve concentration (which has
been shown to increase anxiety) can be very helpful. I highly recommend the
twice-daily deep rest and enlivenment of the Transcendental Meditation (TM)
technique, whose benefits have been verified by over 700 published research
studies.
c) Eat organic, whole fresh food that is freshly prepared. There is an Ayurvedic
saying: "Without proper diet. medicine is of no use. With proper diet, medicine
is of no need." Be sure to avoid those leftovers, processed and microwaved foods
for better nutrition and vitality.
d) Perform Ayurvedic oil massage in the morning (abhyanga). Morning oil massage
purifies the entire body, reduces anxiety and stress, helps prevent and heal
injuries and supports circulation. It is especially helpful in creating a
radiant complexion and keeping your skin youthful. Research shows it may also
help prevent skin cancers.
e) Practice yoga asanas. Maintaining flexibility and circulation is key to
health.
f) Practice pranayama (yoga breathing) techniques. Pranayama enlivens the mind
and body. Ideally practice the following sequence twice a day. Asanas, pranayama
and meditation.
Summary
Everyone's unique beauty shines forth when they have radiant health and personal
happiness. Beauty is a side effect of a balanced, fulfilled life. Supreme
personal beauty is accessible to everyone who is willing to take more control of
their health in their day-to-day life through time-tested principles of natural
living.
For most of us, beauty is not a gift but a choice. Every woman can be radiantly
beautiful simply by beginning to lead a healthier life. You will be rewarded by
the glowing effects you will see in your mirror each day and the powerful,
bliss-producing effect your special beauty has on everyone in your life.
About the Author
Nancy
Lonsdorf M.D. received her M.D. from Johns Hopkins and did her postgraduate
training at Stanford. She is currently the Medical Director of The Raj Ayurveda
Health Center in Vedic City Iowa.
www.ayurveda-ayurvedic.com |
|