A hybrid scientific + yogic guide for sustainable fat loss, better metabolism, and lifelong balance Quick summary (TL;DR)Yoga (including mindful breathing/pranayama) supports weight loss and maintenance through three major pathways: Improving eating behaviour (mindful eating, lower energy intake) Modulating stress …
Emotional eating is a mind–gut–emotion loop. It affects all age groups differently, disrupts hormones, and leads to long-term weight gain and diseases. Healing requires understanding emotional triggers, regulating stress, nurturing the gut–brain axis, and using yogic tools like mindful breathing, asanas, and witness awareness. Weight gain is not about appearance—it is a metabolic and emotional condition connected to diabetes, hypertension, fatty liver, PCOS, joint issues, anxiety, and more. With the right mix of psychology, lifestyle practices, and yogic wisdom, emotional eating can be reversed, and long-term weight balance achieved.
Ragi (nachni) rotis are a scientifically proven superfood for weight loss, diabetes management, winter immunity, heart health, and digestive wellness. Rich in calcium, fiber, polyphenols, and essential amino acids, ragi helps stabilize blood sugar, reduce cholesterol, improve satiety, and support long-term metabolic balance. Ideal for urban cities like Delhi, ragi provides antioxidant protection against pollution, helps manage stress, and offers sustained winter warmth and energy. When consumed in moderate portions—1–2 rotis per meal—ragi is safe for most people, though those with kidney stones or hypothyroidism should limit intake. Overall, ragi is a powerful, affordable, and sustainable grain for a modern healthy lifestyle.
Before you begin any weight-loss journey, the most important step is preparation—not of your diet plan, but of your mind, intentions, and inner readiness. True transformation doesn’t start on your plate or in the gym; it begins with clarity, commitment, …
Healing Obesity is far more than excess body weight. It is a multidimensional imbalance—physical, emotional, behavioural, environmental, metabolic, and sometimes spiritual. Traditionally defined by an elevated Body Mass Index (BMI)—a person’s weight (kg) divided by height (m²)—obesity begins when BMI …
