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diet · the first medicine

Not a diet of restriction.
A diet of fire.

The yogic view of food is not what to cut out. It is what keeps the digestive fire — अग्नि — strong, so the body can use what you give it.

agni — the digestive fire

What it is, and what kills it

Agni is the metabolic intelligence sitting at the navel. Strong agni means food digests cleanly, the body absorbs nutrients, waste is eliminated, and energy is even through the day. Weak agni means heaviness, bloating, brain fog, and slow recovery — no matter what you eat.

What weakens agni: cold drinks with hot food, eating in a hurry, eating late at night, eating while stressed or on the phone, snacking constantly between meals, sitting still after a meal. None of these are about what you eat. They are about how.

the shape of a yogic meal

Warm · seasoned · in season · finished in 30 minutes

Warm food. Seasoned with what the body recognises — cumin, ginger, turmeric, ajwain. In season, ideally local. Eaten sitting down, not standing or walking. Eaten in about thirty minutes, neither rushed nor stretched. A short pause before standing up. A ten-minute walk after.

This is the shape, regardless of whether you eat vegetarian or otherwise, low-carb or otherwise. The lineage is more about rhythm than ingredient.

the three rhythms of the day

Light · main · light

Breakfast: light, warm. The body has just woken; agni is still rising. Lunch: the heaviest meal, between 12 and 2 p.m., when agni is at its peak. Dinner: light again, finished by 8 p.m., so the body sleeps without digesting.

This is the opposite of the modern shape — light breakfast, working-lunch salad, big late dinner. Reversing it for two weeks is the single biggest dietary change most bodies can make.

When you eat — and how — matters as much as what.

Three small experiments

Drink water at room temperature, not cold (—)
daily
Eat sitting down, no phone, 30 minutes (—)
all meals
Walk ten minutes after lunch and dinner (—)
daily
Heaviest meal at lunch, lightest at dinner (—)
2 weeks
Spice for the season — warm in winter, cool in summer (—)
always
practise it with me

Come learn the
rhythm with me.

I spend the first ten minutes of every Saturday class on the day — diet, rhythm, the small disciplines. Free, online, just come.

Reserve your place — Saturday 7:30 PM