What is Ayurveda?
Ayurveda is one of the world’s oldest systems of medicine, originating in India thousands of years ago. The word “Ayurveda” comes from two Sanskrit words: “ayus”, meaning life, and “veda”, meaning knowledge or science. It is commonly translated as “the science of life.”
For many people searching for holistic health, natural healing, or a more natural treatment approach, Ayurveda is one of the most complete traditional systems to understand. It is not just a set of remedies. It is a way of looking at the whole person: body, mind, digestion, sleep, stress, lifestyle, constitution, environment, and daily rhythm.
In Malta, many people first encounter Ayurveda through massage, oils, spa treatments, yoga, or wellness retreats. These can be valuable, but Ayurveda is much broader than relaxation. At its heart, Ayurveda is a whole-person medical system concerned with constitution, digestion, sleep, stress, prevention, lifestyle, and the relationship between the body and mind.
It does not treat physical health and mental health as completely separate. It sees them as deeply connected and constantly influencing one another.
Rather than treating symptoms as isolated problems, Ayurveda asks a deeper question:
What pattern has moved this person away from balance?
That pattern may involve digestion, stress, sleep, unsuitable food, emotional strain, overwork, seasonal change, trauma, ageing, or lifestyle habits that no longer suit the person’s constitution.
Once the pattern is understood, care can be personalised using nutrition, herbs, spices, oils, massage, cleansing methods, yoga, meditation, breathwork, and lifestyle changes. But the tools are not the main point. The real strength of Ayurveda is that it helps a person understand themselves more clearly and choose the kind of care their body and mind actually need.
Ayurveda, holistic health, and natural healing
Ayurveda can be understood as one of the world’s oldest systems of holistic health. It takes a natural healing approach by asking how the body, mind, digestion, sleep, stress, environment, emotions, food, movement, and daily rhythm interact.
This matters because many people do not experience their health problems in isolated boxes. Stress affects sleep. Sleep affects energy. Digestion affects mood. Pain affects confidence. Emotional strain affects the body. The body also affects the mind.
A truly holistic approach does not mean ignoring modern medicine or replacing proper diagnosis. It means looking at the whole pattern and asking what is actually driving the imbalance. This is how I practise natural medicine: natural treatment used where it genuinely helps, with conventional diagnosis and safety kept alongside it.
In Ayurveda, natural treatment is not meant to be random. Food, herbs, oils, spices, self-care, breathing, meditation, movement, and lifestyle changes should be chosen according to the person’s constitution, symptoms, medical context, and current state. The aim is not simply to add more natural remedies. The aim is to restore balance intelligently.
Ayurveda as the science of life
Ayurveda is as concerned with preventing imbalance before it takes hold as with treating illness once it has.
Health is not only the absence of disease. It is a state of better balance, resilience, digestion, energy, clarity, rhythm, and connection between body and mind.
Modern healthcare is very good at many things: emergencies, surgery, diagnosis, medication, imaging, blood testing, monitoring, and specialist care. These are essential. But many people with chronic symptoms fall into a different category. Their tests may look normal, or only partly explain what they feel. They may have fatigue, poor sleep, gut symptoms, anxiety, pain, brain fog, skin flares, hormonal changes, stress overload, or a general sense that something is not right.
In these situations, the issue is often not one isolated symptom. It is the wider pattern.
Ayurveda is useful because it pays attention to the foundations that shape health every day: food, digestion, rhythm, sleep, stress, emotional state, season, constitution, and lifestyle. It gives language to subtle changes before they become more serious. It helps people notice when their body is whispering, not only when it is shouting.
A meal should nourish you. It should help you feel steadier, clearer, and more capable of living your day. If you regularly feel heavy, dull, bloated, foggy, sleepy, acidic, wired, or unsettled after eating, Ayurveda would not ignore that. It would ask what your body is trying to show you.
That is one of Ayurveda’s strengths. It teaches people to listen earlier, understand patterns more deeply, and make practical changes before imbalance becomes more established.
Constitution, inner balance, and the doshas
Just as every person has a unique fingerprint, Ayurveda teaches that each person has a unique constitution. This is their natural pattern of body, mind, digestion, emotions, energy, and tendencies.
In Ayurveda, this constitution is understood through the three doshas: Vata, Pitta, and Kapha. These are not rigid personality types. They are patterns of function that describe how different qualities show up in the body and mind.
Your underlying constitution remains your natural pattern, but your current state can move away from balance. Stress, unsuitable food, poor sleep, seasonal changes, emotional strain, trauma, overwork, ageing, and daily habits can all disturb that balance. Over time, these disturbances may show up as symptoms.
Every person has all three doshas, but usually in different proportions. One person may naturally have more Vata, another more Pitta, another more Kapha. When we understand the doshas, we can begin to see why the same symptom may have different causes in different people, and why the same treatment does not suit everyone.
What follows is a brief overview of each. The fuller picture, and how it applies to you specifically, is what a consultation is for.
Vata: movement, sensitivity, and irregularity
Vata is the principle of movement. It governs breath, circulation, nerve impulses, elimination, thoughts, speech, and attention. It is dry, light, cold, mobile, subtle, and irregular.
In the body, Vata may show up as dry skin, cracking joints, bloating, constipation, cold hands and feet, a lighter frame, or difficulty gaining weight. In the mind, it may show up as fast thinking, restlessness, variable focus, or difficulty sitting still.
When balanced, Vata gives creativity, enthusiasm, sensitivity, and adaptability. When aggravated, it may become anxiety, insomnia, scattered attention, tension, fatigue, and a feeling of being ungrounded.
Vata tends to increase with irregular routines, travel, overstimulation, poor sleep, cold weather, cold or raw foods, stress, and seasonal change. Ayurveda supports Vata through warmth, routine, grounding, rest, cooked nourishing food, oil, and steadiness.
Pitta: transformation, heat, and intensity
Pitta is the principle of transformation. It is closely related to the fire element and is hot, sharp, light, sour, pungent, and penetrating.
In the body, Pitta may show up as warmth, strong appetite, focused digestion, a tendency toward redness, acidity, heartburn, inflammation, or skin sensitivity. In the mind, it may show up as intelligence, focus, ambition, discipline, and a need to understand things properly.
When balanced, Pitta gives clarity, courage, leadership, precision, and good decision-making. When aggravated, it may become irritability, impatience, perfectionism, criticism, inflammation, skin flares, and overdrive.
Pitta tends to increase with heat, summer, strong sun, overwork, intense competition, alcohol, and excess spicy or acidic foods. Ayurveda supports Pitta through cooling foods, gentler routines, emotional spaciousness, and reducing excess heat, pressure, and stimulation.
Kapha: structure, stability, and nourishment
Kapha is the principle of structure, lubrication, immunity, and stability. It is associated with the Earth and Water elements and is heavy, slow, cool, soft, dense, stable, and moist.
In the body, Kapha may show up as a stronger frame, steady stamina, deep sleep, slower digestion, a tendency to gain weight more easily, water retention, congestion, or heaviness. In the mind, it may show up as calmness, patience, loyalty, and groundedness.
When balanced, Kapha gives endurance, compassion, strength, resilience, and steadiness. When aggravated, it may become lethargy, low motivation, emotional heaviness, attachment, congestion, or stagnation.
Kapha tends to increase in colder, damp seasons, with rich heavy foods, and with a lack of movement. Ayurveda supports Kapha through warmth, lightness, movement, stimulation, variety, and lighter foods with more pungent, bitter, and astringent qualities.
Most people are not just one dosha
In real life, most people are not purely Vata, Pitta, or Kapha. They are a unique combination.
Someone may have a Vata constitution but a Pitta imbalance. Another person may have strong Kapha physically, but become Vata-aggravated through stress, poor sleep, travel, and irregular meals.
This is why Ayurvedic care should not be reduced to a quick quiz. A dosha quiz may be interesting, but it cannot replace a proper consultation.
The question is not simply: “What dosha am I?”
The better question is:
What is my natural constitution, what is my current imbalance, and what is the right next step for my body and mind now?
Ayurveda, digestion, stress, and mental health
Ayurveda has always understood that the mind and body influence each other.
In modern language, we might speak about stress physiology, the nervous system, sleep, digestion, inflammation, gut-brain communication, trauma, burnout, or emotional regulation. Ayurveda uses a different language, but it is often looking at the same human reality: the body and mind are not separate.
For many people, mental health is rarely only mental. By the time they seek help, anxiety, low mood, burnout, or overwhelm may also appear with poor sleep, fatigue, gut symptoms, brain fog, tension, pain, emotional reactivity, or a sense that the body is stuck in survival mode.
Ayurveda helps by asking what is destabilising the system. Is the person depleted and ungrounded? Overheated and overdriven? Heavy, stagnant, and stuck? Are meals irregular? Is sleep poor? Is digestion weak? Is the person living in a way that constantly pushes against their constitution?
This does not replace appropriate mental health care. But it can add an important whole-person lens, especially when stress, sleep, digestion, lifestyle, and nervous-system regulation are part of the pattern.
How I use this in clinic
That is what Ayurveda is. How I actually use it with patients, as one of three medical lenses alongside conventional medicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine, is set out on Ayurveda. If you want to see how all three lenses come together in one plan, read integrative medicine.
If something here felt personally true and you would like to continue it in conversation, feel free to send a message on WhatsApp.
Dr Shehan Wijesingha, MD, M.TCM, DipAP, BMedSci, CPT. Vice President of the Association of Ayurvedic Professionals UK.
Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes. It is not a substitute for individual medical assessment, diagnosis, or treatment. Do not alter or stop medication, or begin new treatment, based on this article alone. If you are in crisis, contact your GP, go to an emergency department, call a crisis line, or contact the appropriate Malta-based service. Consult a qualified clinician who can evaluate your specific situation.