Why giving matters now
Women today carry many burdens—professional, familial, and social. This empowerment, while transformative, often comes with a physiological cost: disrupted sleep, irregular meals, chronic stress and sedentary time. These habits precipitate Srotoavarodha (micro-channel blockage), agnimandya (impaired digestive fire) and progressive dosha imbalance. Clinically, we see increasing PCOS, menstrual irregularities, infertility, fatigue syndromes, and metabolic diseases. To live up to the International Women’s Day theme, women must first give themselves permission and practical tools to prioritise restorative care—that is the precondition for gaining sustained vitality.
Principles of Ayurveda intervention
Detox and reset
When channels are blocked by ama, the physiology miscommunicates. A staged Shodhana protocol, starting gently with Pachana (digestive correction) and moving on to targeted Shodhana when indicated, clears obstruction and restores hormonal signalling. For conditions like PCOS, these practices may reduce insulin resistance and improve ovulatory patterns. Clinical protocols with dietary changes reduce inflammation and improve reproductive health.
Reproductive optimisation
Infertility benefits more from preparation than from last-minute interventions. Ritumati Paricharya (menstrual regimens) prepares the body rhythmically. Vasti therapies modulate Apana Vata and local pelvic circulation. Dietary correction and Rasayana measures improve endometrial receptivity. Giving the body months of structured support before conception reliably increases the probability of a healthy pregnancy and reduces early pregnancy loss.
Mental fitness
Stress is both a symptom and a driver of disorder. Simple daily investments — 20–30 minutes of pranayama, short meditations, and counselling where needed — balance Vata and stabilise mood. These practices are low-cost, high-return gifts: improved sleep, better digestion and clearer decision-making.
Lifecycle-specific Paricharyas —for lifelong gain
- Bala (childhood) — Care for girl child with wholesome foods, sleep, routine, and immunomodulatory care. Childhood lays the foundation for digestive power (agni) and tissue formation.
- Kumari (adolescence) — Educate and counsel girls on menstrual health, nutrition, and emotional stability. Stabilise Vata and Pitta with warm and regular meals, stress management, and proper hygiene to ensure normal and predictable cycles.
- Rajaswala (menstruating female) — For the first three days of menstruation, women need to “give” rest and light, warm, and easily digestible foods to their bodies. These practices help you to “gain” Apana Vata balance and prevent conditions like PCOS and other menstrual disorders.
- Ritumati (fertile years) — Lead a routine life with a nutritious diet and moderate exercise. Seasonal and personalised Paricharya optimise ovulatory function and reproductive resilience.
- Garbhini (pregnancy) — Focus on high-quality nutrition (ghee, milk, seasonal produce), emotional support and avoidance of toxins. Gentle, supervised therapies and close monitoring protect maternal reserves. “Giving” the mind positive emotions and “giving” the body nutrient-rich foods ensures the optimal development of the fetus as well.
- Sutika (post-natal) — Prioritise tissue replenishment, lactation support and Vata pacification. Structured rest, nourishing diets and gradual returns to activity prevent Dhatukshaya and chronic weakness.
- Rajonivrutti (menopause) — Approach menopause as a natural transition. By “giving” the body phytoestrogen-rich herbs, women can “gain” relief from hot flashes and protect themselves against post-menopausal osteoporosis and cardiovascular disease while managing rising Vata and tissue depletion (Dhatukshaya).
Rasayana — the strategic long-term gift
Translating principles into practice
How does a busy woman “give” without feeling she must add another burden? Start small and make it sustainable.
- Morning: warm water, 5 -10 minutes of pranayama, and a balanced breakfast to kindle agni.
- Midday: mindful meal, short walk, and hydration.
- Evening: screen curfew one hour before bed, a light warm dinner and 10–15 minutes of restorative yoga or meditation.
- Weekly: at least two sessions of moderate physical activity and one social or creative activity for emotional renewal.
- Quarterly: clinical check-ins for menstrual health, metabolic markers, and mental health screening.
Apollo AyurVAID for Women
Our strength is individualised long-term care. When integrated with modern diagnostics such as hormonal assays, metabolic panels, and imaging, the combined approach often yields measurable improvements in cycle regularity, metabolic indices and quality of life. We do not replace modern care. We augment it with lifestyle medicine and age-old protocols that have stood the test of empirical clinical application.

