Meditation

Ayurveda
Yoga
 


 About Dr.Steephan, BAMS

Ayurveda Doctor - Dr.Steephan C.GDr. Steephan hails from Kerala State in South India. Kerala is the most well known destination in the world for Ayurveda Medicine and its special treatment methods.

 

Dr.Steephan is a qualified Ayurvedic Doctor and Yoga Teacher with a degree in Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery  (BAMS) from the University of Calicut in Kerala. He has also taken Diploma in Yoga teaching from Sivananda Yoga  Vedanta Ashram in Kerala. Soon after completing his degree in Ayurveda Medicine & Surgery, he gained valuable training in conventional medicine from Dr. M.George, MBBS, MD (Chief Physician, Holy Cross Hospital, Nagercoil) at Holy Cross Multi Speciality Hospital, Nagercoil, South India. There after he started a special wing for Ayurveda and Yoga at Holy Cross Hospital, Nagercoil and worked there for six years as chief consultant in Ayurveda and Yoga. During his practice at Holy Cross Hospital he has treated a vast variety of Chronic Orthopaedic and Neurological ailments using Ayurveda, Yoga and Meditation Therapies.

 

He has also treated a lot of chronic diabetic ulcers which had been advised for amputation.

 

He has also proved his skill in treating Sciatica, Osteoarthritis, Panic Attacks, Anxiety, Stress, Depression and Repetitive Strain Injuries (Computer workers health problems)

 

He has also served as consultant physician in Ayurveda and a consultant in Yoga and meditation at PSM Medical Enterprises, Seychelles Islands. During the period in Seychelles Islands, he had served as a Yoga Teacher in the Indian High Commission Yoga Club, Seychelles Islands.

 

He has been practicing and teaching Ayurveda, Yoga and Meditation for the past nine years in India and abroad.

 

Dr.Steephan is currently practising at Santhigiri Ecovedic Ayurveda Center in Kerala, which is run by Ecovedic Products Pvt. Ltd, Aluva, Kerala. where he administers Ayurvedic treatments and provides training in Ayurveda, Yoga and Meditation.

 

Santhigiri Ecovedic Ayurveda CenterSanthigiri Ecovedic Ayurveda Center is a beautiful resort hidden in a grove appealingly offset against green palms, panoramic landscape away from maddening crowd, free from pollution. This place is having exclusive privacy, tranquility and feel at home experience designed to provide a serene surrounding to master the restless mind and spiritual quest through “Yoga and Meditation”.

 

 



Santhigiri - Meditation Center

 

Santhigiri Ecovedic Ayurveda Center is located at Edathala, Aluva (Alwaye) 8 K.M away from Aluva Railway Station, 25 minutes drive both from Cochin (Kochi) International Airport and Ernakulam City (Cochin).

 


 



"A centre where Ayurveda has not been Commercialized."

 

Contact us at E-Mail: mail@ayurvedatreatments.net
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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  Ayurveda, Ayurveda Treatments, Ayurveda Institute, Ayurveda school, Ayurveda schools, Ayurvedic school, Ayurvedic schools, Ayur-veda, Ayurved, ayurvedic, Therapy, Ayur-vedic Therapy, India, Indian Medicine, Indian Holistic Treatements Treatments, Therapist Course, Kerala Ayurvedic Resort, Rejuvenation Therapy, Rejuvenation Course, Rejuvenation Training, Rejuvenation School Detoxification Therapy, Panchakarma Therapy, Panchakarma Training, Astanga Yoga, Yoga Training, Yoga Courses, Yoga Classes, Yoga and Meditation, Meditation Training, Meditation Couses, Meditation Therapy, Meditation Kerala Stress and Depression, Repetitive Strain Injuries, Strain, Injuries. Irritable Bowel, Syndrome, Sciatica, Multiple Sclerosis, Arthritis Anryosing Spondilis, Motor Neurone Diseases, Parkinsonism, Institute, Herbs, medicine, herbology, nutrition, vasant lad, Panchakarma, Pancha karma, Indian medicine, Yoga, Jyotish, astrology, vata, pitta, kapha. Ayurveda or ayurvedic medicine is a more than 6,000 year old comprehensive system of medicine based on a holistic approach rooted in Vedic culture. Its conspicuous use of the word veda, or knowledge, reveals its role in early Hinduism and describes its hallowed place in India. Ayurveda also had a tradition of surgery. Two early texts of Ayurveda are the Charaka Samhita and the Sushruta Samhita. Ayurveda This article is part of the branches of CAM series. CAM Classifications NCCAM: Alternative Medical System Modality: Professionalized Culture: Eastern Vedic Ayurveda used inoculation for protection against smallpox. This was a consequence of the principle that like cures like on a small level, whereas at a grosser level opposites cure opposites. Ayurveda has employed certain toxic substances in small dosages for powerful healing effects, including its alchemical preparations. It also used various herbal and animal toxins like snake venoms. It has a whole science of toxicology called agada-tantra as one of the eight branches of traditional Ayurveda. This branch not only treated poisons but used them in certain conditions, generally in small dosages. The Ayurvedic idea is that the organism adapts to the environment and its food, climate etc. This principle of adaptation is called satyma. Through introducing small amounts of a germ, the organism can adapt to it and learn to resist it. Ayurveda became increasingly symptom-based, treating the symptoms of a disease rather than the root cause. However, it is important to note that Ayurveda was originally a consciousness based system of health care. Its philosophy, expressed in modern terms, is to strengthen the immune system. Qualities It could be said that the simple essence of ayurveda is knowledge and awareness of the qualities of nature – called gurvadi gunah. By understanding the qualities inherent in the environment, in foodstuffs, in activities, etc., one gains an appreciation of their effects on the individual constitution through the principle of similarities; i.e., that similarities cause increase while dissimilarities cause decrease. Thus hot qualities in the environment or diet will increase hot qualities in the body. The gurvadi gunah are listed in Vagbhata's Ashtanga Hrdayam as: Doshas The 3 main doshas (organizing qualities of intelligence) are Vata (resembles the classical elements ether and air), Pitta (fire), and Kapha (water and earth). All bodily processes are believed to be governed by a balance of the 3 doshas. Whichever dosha appears to dominate a person's behavior and physique is called his constitution type. Each constitution type has particular strengths and susceptibilities. Vata Vata, composed of air and space, governs all movement in the mind and body and must be kept in good balance. Too much vata leads to "worries, insomnia, cramps and constipation.... Vata controls blood flow, elimination of wastes, breathing and the movement of thoughts across the mind." Vata activates the nervous system, hearing and speech; and expresses as enthusiasm and creativity. Vata also controls the other two principles, Pitta and Kapha, and is usually the first cause of disease. Pitta Pitta is said to be composed of fire and water; it governs "all heat, metabolism and transformation in the mind and body. It controls how we digest food, how we metabolize our sensory perceptions, and how we discriminate between right and wrong." Pitta must be kept in balance, too. "Too much [Pitta] can lead to anger, criticism, ulcers, rashes and thinning hair." Kapha Kapha consists of earth and water. "Kapha cements the elements in the body, providing the material for physical structure. This dosha maintains body resistance....Kapha lubricates the joints; provides moisture to the skin; helps to heal wounds; fills the spaces in the body; gives biological strength, vigor and stability; supports memory retention; gives energy to the heart and lungs and maintains immunity...Kapha is responsible for emotions of attachment, greed and long-standing envy; it is also expressed in tendencies toward calmness, forgiveness and love." Too much Kapha leads to lethargy and weight gain, as well as congestion and allergies. In sum, Ayurveda represents a system that considers both the states of mind and body in its diagnosis and treatment. Ayurveda took into consideration the fact that many illnesses are caused by foreign agents and small organisms that may require aggressive intervention. Today Having lost state patronage during the British rule in India, Ayurveda is making a slow comeback. In practice in India, there are Ayurvedic doctors who are purists and others who choose to use it in combination with Western medicine. Ayurveda is gaining lots of interest in the Western countries. Ayurvedic treatments in the West are primarily dietary and herbal due to lack of well educated Ayurvedic practitioners. Patients are classified by body types, or prakriti, which are determined by proportions of the three doshas. Illness and disease are considered to be a matter of imbalance in the doshas. Treatment is aimed at restoring harmony or balance to the mind-body system.Ayurvedic medicine is gaining in popularity around the world.