Ayurveda
is the oldest surviving complete medical system in the world.
Derived from its ancient Sanskrit roots - ayus
(life) and ved (knowledge) and offering a rich,
comprehensive outlook to a healthy life, its origins go back
nearly 5000 years. To when it was expounded and practiced
by the same spiritual rishis, who laid
the foundations of the Vedic civilisation in
India, by organising the fundamentals of life into proper
systems.
The
main source of knowledge in this field therefore remain the
Vedas, the divine books of knowledge they propounded,
and more specifically the fourth of the series, namely Atharvaveda
that dates back to around 1000 BC. Of the few other
treatises on Ayurveda that have survived from
around the same time, the most famous are Charaka Samhita
and the Sushruta Samhita which concentrate
on internal medicine and surgery respectively. The Astanga
Hridayam is a more concise compilation of earlier
texts that was created about a thousand years ago. These between
them forming a greater part of the knowledge base on Ayurveda
as it is practiced today.
The
art of Ayurveda had spread around in the 6th
century BC to Tibet, China, Mongolia, Korea and Sri Lanka,
carried over by the Buddhist monks travelling to those lands.
Although not much of it survives in original form, its effects
can be seen in the various new age concepts that have originated
from there.
No
philosophy has had greater influence on Ayurveda
than Sankhaya's philosophy of creation and manifestation.
Which professes that behind all creation there is a state
of pure existence or awareness, which is beyond time and space,
has no beginning or end, and no qualities. Within pure existence,
there arises a desire to experience itself, which results
in disequilibrium and causes the manifestation of the primordial
physical energy. And the two unite to make the "dance of creation"
come alive.
Imponderable,
indescribable and extremely subtle, this primordial energy
which and all that flows from it existing only in pure existence
is the creative force of all action, a source of form that
has qualities. Matter and energy are so closely related that
when energy takes form, we tend to think of it in terms of
matter only. And much modified, it ultimately leads to the
manifestation of our familiar mental and physical worlds.
It
also gives rise to cosmic consciousness, which is the universal
order that prevades all life. Individual intelligence, as
distinct from the everyday intellectual mind, is derived from
and is part of this consciousness. It is the inner wisdom,
the part of individuality that remains unswayed by the demands
of daily life, or by Ahamkara, the sense of
`I-ness’.
A
Sanskrit word with no exact translation, Ahamkara,
is a concept not quite understood by everyone as it is
often misleadingly equated to ego. Embracing much more than
just that, it is in essence that part of me which knows which
parts of the universal creation are me. Since I am not separate
from the universal consciousness, but I has an identity that
differentiates and defines the boundaries of me. All creations
therefore have Ahamkara, not just human beings.
There
arises from Ahamkara a two-fold creation. The
first is Satwa, the subjective world, which
is able to perceive and manipulate matter. It comprises the
subtle body (the mind), the capacity of the five sense organs
to hear, feel, see, taste and smell, and for the five organs
of action to speak, grasp, move, procreate and excrete. The
mind and the subtle organs providing the bridge between the
body, the Ahamkara and the inner wisdom, which
three together is considered the essential nature of humans.
The
second is Tamas, the objective world of the
five elements of sound, touch, vision, taste and smell –
the five subtle elements that give rise to the dense elements
of ether or space, air, fire, water and the earth –
from which all matter of the physical world is derived. And
it is Rajas, the force or the energy of movement,
which brings together parts of these two worlds.
Dense
Element |
Subtle
Element |
Sense
Organ |
Motor
Organ |
Function
|
Space
|
Sound
|
Ears
|
Vocal
Chords |
Speaking
|
Air
|
Touch
|
Skin
|
Hands
|
Grasping
|
Fire
|
Sight
|
Eyes
|
Feet
|
Moving
|
Water
|
Taste
|
Tongue
|
Genitals
|
Procreating
|
Earth
|
Smell
|
Nose
|
Anus
|
Excreting
|
It
is worth noting that even at the stage of the dense elements
the philosophy of creation –which according to Sankaya
is now and in the present, without any past and any future
– is still dealing with aspects of existence beyond
our simple physical realms. The point of contention being
that we are the first and foremost spirit experiencing existence.
To use Ayurveda in daily life, one has neither
to accept nor even understand this philosophy. But it does
provide a deeper insight into how Ayurveda works
towards betterment of your health.
| Ayurveda
therefore is not simply a health care system but a
form of lifestyle adopted to maintain perfect balance
and harmony within the human existence, from the most
abstract transcendental values to the most concrete
physiological expressions. Based on the premise that
life represents an intelligent co-ordination of the
Atma (Soul), Mana (Mind),
Indriya (Senses) and Sharira
(Body). That revolves around the five dense elements
that go into the making of the constitution of each
individual, called Prakriti. Which in
turn is determined by the vital balance of the three
physical energies - Vata,
Pitta, Kapha
and the three mental energies - Satwa, Rajas,
Tamas. |
Ayurveda
thus offers a unique blend of science and philosophy that
balances the physical, mental, emotional and spiritual components
necessary for holistic health. |