Expanding Ayurvedic nutrition to include sensory and information intake, recognizing all inputs affect mental quality and clarity.
Ahara—food—is one of three pillars of Ayurvedic health. But ahara extends beyond physical food to all inputs the mind consumes: sensory experiences, relationships, media, information, and impressions. Patanjali's sense withdrawal (pratyahara) addresses this: the mind becomes what it digests through all channels. Ayurvedic mental health recognizes that a sattvic diet combined with consuming violent media, toxic relationships, or overwhelming information creates internal contradiction. Your psychological nutrition must be holistic and consciously chosen. Sattvic ahara includes nutritious food, uplifting conversations, inspiring literature, natural beauty, and contemplative silence. Rajasic ahara (excessive stimulation, news, entertainment) creates agitation. Tamasic ahara (violence, degrading content) creates dullness and depression. Patanjali's yoga deepens through dietary awareness—choosing not just what nourishes the body but what feeds the mind toward clarity and liberation. By treating all sensory and informational intake as ahara requiring conscious selection and digestion, you take responsibility for your psychological quality and create the purified mental environment that yoga practice requires.
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