Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

triphala

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

> How long do you prescribe triphala for your patients?

> Can you take it on a chronic basis?

>

 

 

love love love triphala. thanks michael for the thoughts on its chinese

translation, very interesting. the only other notes i would add come from dr

vasant lad and are that it should be taken preferably an hour before or after

food(although i see it in patent formulas, particularly banyan's) and definitely

separate from milk products. he also cautioned its use in pregnancy due to its

moving capabilities although it seems quite safe. interestingly, he also

recommends taking it in the morning if a more immediate bowel cleansing effect

is desired and in the evening if a " deeper " cleansing and rejuvination of the

bodily tissues(dhatus) is desired. one can also take 1/4 tsp. with 1 tsp. of

honey as a great rejuvinative tonic(rasayana) for the body as a whole. triphala

works so well with the bowels he says because of its balanced effect of clearing

excess and tonifying deficiency. it can clear the bowels as well as strengthen

the peristalic ability, and therefore can be taken indefinitely. i usually

recommend people take it daily for 5 days and then take a day or two off to

watch the body's progress over time.

 

micahel: something that has been on my mind a lot lately is the differences in

the way ayurvedic herbs seem to be prescribed in such simple formula

preparations, and often even as singles, whereas a typical TCM formula having

10-15 herbs is quite common. my ayurvedic herbal studies are limited mostly to

Dr Vasant Lad and his students, and i havent been to india, so maybe my

perspective is skewed. but i wonder if you have any thoughts on why this might

be? two thoughts i have had is that in ayurveda, diet and lifestyle is almost

always the frontline for treatment and therefore leaves herbal prescribing as a

secondary measure, whereas with TCM although adressing diet/lifestyle is

important, a practitioner has more room to " fix " the patient with needles and

herbs it seems which could lead to more complex formulas. ive also wondered if

its that ayurvedic texts such as the charaka samhita with its simple formulas

seem to be still very relevant to the student of ayurveda whereas texts such as

the shang han lun, although studied in school, in my experience, where given a

back seat to the more modern texts such as bensky, chen and chen, etc. hope this

is a clear question. have you found any ayurvedic texts in english with good

formulas descriptions such as we might find for TCM? thanks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Does anyone know about He zi dosing? Small doses do the opposite of large

doses, but I'm not sure which one does what.... I guess we can always

experiment on ourselves.

 

Isn't the He zi from Tibet blue-green in color?

Is the Chinese version chao He zi..? which makes it more astringent?

 

K

 

 

 

On Mon, Jan 4, 2010 at 12:52 PM, josh_nct1 <chaitime wrote:

 

>

>

> > How long do you prescribe triphala for your patients?

> > Can you take it on a chronic basis?

> >

>

> love love love triphala. thanks michael for the thoughts on its chinese

> translation, very interesting. the only other notes i would add come from dr

> vasant lad and are that it should be taken preferably an hour before or

> after food(although i see it in patent formulas, particularly banyan's) and

> definitely separate from milk products. he also cautioned its use in

> pregnancy due to its moving capabilities although it seems quite safe.

> interestingly, he also recommends taking it in the morning if a more

> immediate bowel cleansing effect is desired and in the evening if a " deeper "

> cleansing and rejuvination of the bodily tissues(dhatus) is desired. one can

> also take 1/4 tsp. with 1 tsp. of honey as a great rejuvinative

> tonic(rasayana) for the body as a whole. triphala works so well with the

> bowels he says because of its balanced effect of clearing excess and

> tonifying deficiency. it can clear the bowels as well as strengthen the

> peristalic ability, and therefore can be taken indefinitely. i usually

> recommend people take it daily for 5 days and then take a day or two off to

> watch the body's progress over time.

>

> micahel: something that has been on my mind a lot lately is the differences

> in the way ayurvedic herbs seem to be prescribed in such simple formula

> preparations, and often even as singles, whereas a typical TCM formula

> having 10-15 herbs is quite common. my ayurvedic herbal studies are limited

> mostly to Dr Vasant Lad and his students, and i havent been to india, so

> maybe my perspective is skewed. but i wonder if you have any thoughts on why

> this might be? two thoughts i have had is that in ayurveda, diet and

> lifestyle is almost always the frontline for treatment and therefore leaves

> herbal prescribing as a secondary measure, whereas with TCM although

> adressing diet/lifestyle is important, a practitioner has more room to " fix "

> the patient with needles and herbs it seems which could lead to more complex

> formulas. ive also wondered if its that ayurvedic texts such as the charaka

> samhita with its simple formulas seem to be still very relevant to the

> student of ayurveda whereas texts such as the shang han lun, although

> studied in school, in my experience, where given a back seat to the more

> modern texts such as bensky, chen and chen, etc. hope this is a clear

> question. have you found any ayurvedic texts in english with good formulas

> descriptions such as we might find for TCM? thanks.

>

>

>

 

 

 

--

 

 

""

 

 

www.tcmreview.com

 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd sure appreciate clarification on that.

 

 

 

 

On Behalf Of

Monday, January 04, 2010 8:05 PM

 

Re: triphala

 

 

 

 

 

Does anyone know about He zi dosing? Small doses do the opposite of large

doses, but I'm not sure which one does what.... I guess we can always

experiment on ourselves.

 

Isn't the He zi from Tibet blue-green in color?

Is the Chinese version chao He zi..? which makes it more astringent?

 

K

 

On Mon, Jan 4, 2010 at 12:52 PM, josh_nct1 <chaitime

<chaitime%40mail.com> > wrote:

 

>

>

> > How long do you prescribe triphala for your patients?

> > Can you take it on a chronic basis?

> >

>

> love love love triphala. thanks michael for the thoughts on its chinese

> translation, very interesting. the only other notes i would add come from

dr

> vasant lad and are that it should be taken preferably an hour before or

> after food(although i see it in patent formulas, particularly banyan's)

and

> definitely separate from milk products. he also cautioned its use in

> pregnancy due to its moving capabilities although it seems quite safe.

> interestingly, he also recommends taking it in the morning if a more

> immediate bowel cleansing effect is desired and in the evening if a

" deeper "

> cleansing and rejuvination of the bodily tissues(dhatus) is desired. one

can

> also take 1/4 tsp. with 1 tsp. of honey as a great rejuvinative

> tonic(rasayana) for the body as a whole. triphala works so well with the

> bowels he says because of its balanced effect of clearing excess and

> tonifying deficiency. it can clear the bowels as well as strengthen the

> peristalic ability, and therefore can be taken indefinitely. i usually

> recommend people take it daily for 5 days and then take a day or two off

to

> watch the body's progress over time.

>

> micahel: something that has been on my mind a lot lately is the

differences

> in the way ayurvedic herbs seem to be prescribed in such simple formula

> preparations, and often even as singles, whereas a typical TCM formula

> having 10-15 herbs is quite common. my ayurvedic herbal studies are

limited

> mostly to Dr Vasant Lad and his students, and i havent been to india, so

> maybe my perspective is skewed. but i wonder if you have any thoughts on

why

> this might be? two thoughts i have had is that in ayurveda, diet and

> lifestyle is almost always the frontline for treatment and therefore

leaves

> herbal prescribing as a secondary measure, whereas with TCM although

> adressing diet/lifestyle is important, a practitioner has more room to

" fix "

> the patient with needles and herbs it seems which could lead to more

complex

> formulas. ive also wondered if its that ayurvedic texts such as the

charaka

> samhita with its simple formulas seem to be still very relevant to the

> student of ayurveda whereas texts such as the shang han lun, although

> studied in school, in my experience, where given a back seat to the more

> modern texts such as bensky, chen and chen, etc. hope this is a clear

> question. have you found any ayurvedic texts in english with good formulas

> descriptions such as we might find for TCM? thanks.

>

>

>

 

--

 

 

""

 

 

www.tcmreview.com

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...