FindMyCamp

Browse All Camps

Discover the perfect summer camp experience

camps

Art & Crafts Camps
STEM & Science Camps
Adventure & Outdoor Camps
Performing Arts Camps
Academic Camps
Specialty Camps
Overnight Camps
Day Camps
Special Needs Camps
Teen Camps
Popular Destinations
BaliSedonaLos AngelesCosta RicaNew YorkSan FranciscoAustinMiamiJoshua TreeTulum
View All CategoriesView All Destinations

Explore All Features

Powerful tools to grow your events

Platform Features

Smart Dynamic Pricing
Ticket Categories
Assigned Seating
Abandoned Cart Recovery
Visitor Recovery
Donations & Sliding Scale
Affiliate Engine
Ticket Scanner
Coupon Codes
Custom Questions
Ticket Sharing
Upsells & Add-ons
Analytics & Reporting
Email Sequences
Waitlist / Notify / Remind
People & Places
Camp OrganizersCamp LocationsKnowledge BaseInspiration
View All FeaturesAbout Us
PricingBlog
Browse All Events

camps

Art & Crafts CampsSTEM & Science CampsAdventure & Outdoor CampsPerforming Arts CampsAcademic CampsSpecialty CampsOvernight CampsDay Camps

Popular Destinations

BaliSedonaLos AngelesCosta RicaNew YorkSan Francisco

People & Places

Camp OrganizersCamp LocationsKnowledge BaseInspiration

Platform Features

Smart Dynamic PricingTicket CategoriesAssigned SeatingAbandoned Cart RecoveryVisitor RecoveryDonations & Sliding ScaleAffiliate EngineTicket ScannerCoupon CodesCustom QuestionsTicket SharingUpsells & Add-onsAnalytics & ReportingEmail SequencesWaitlist / Notify / Remind
View All FeaturesAbout Us
PricingBlog
Log inParents & familiesCamp directors
Tibetan BuddhistOm Mani Padme Hum · Om Mani Padme Hum · Om Mani Padme Hum · Om Mani Padme Hum ·
  • Browse All Camps
  • For Seekers
  • Art & Crafts Camps
  • STEM & Science Camps
  • Adventure & Outdoor Camps
  • Performing Arts Camps
  • Academic Camps
  • Specialty Camps
  • Retreats
  • Workshops
  • All Categories →
  • New York Metro
  • Los Angeles
  • Chicago
  • Boston
  • San Francisco Bay
  • Seattle
  • Denver
  • Atlanta
  • Dallas / Fort Worth
  • Philadelphia
  • All Cities →
  • For Camp directors
  • For Organizations
  • Pricing
  • 350K+ Buyer Network
  • Abandoned Cart Recovery
  • Smart Dynamic Pricing
  • Ticket Categories
  • Recurring Events
  • Assigned Seating
  • Affiliate Engine
  • Waitlist / Notify
  • Ticket Scanner
  • Embed Widget
  • All Features →
  • About
  • Blog
  • Glossary
  • Inspiration
  • Help Center
  • Contact
  • API Docs
  • Brand Assets
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy

Camps

  • Browse All Camps
  • For Seekers
  • Art & Crafts Camps
  • STEM & Science Camps
  • Adventure & Outdoor Camps
  • Performing Arts Camps
  • Academic Camps
  • Specialty Camps
  • Retreats
  • Workshops
  • All Categories →

Destinations

  • New York Metro
  • Los Angeles
  • Chicago
  • Boston
  • San Francisco Bay
  • Seattle
  • Denver
  • Atlanta
  • Dallas / Fort Worth
  • Philadelphia
  • All Cities →

For Camp directors

  • For Camp directors
  • For Organizations
  • Pricing

Features

  • 350K+ Buyer Network
  • Abandoned Cart Recovery
  • Smart Dynamic Pricing
  • Ticket Categories
  • Recurring Events
  • Assigned Seating
  • Affiliate Engine
  • Waitlist / Notify
  • Ticket Scanner
  • Embed Widget
  • All Features →

Company

  • About
  • Blog
  • Glossary
  • Inspiration
  • Help Center
  • Contact
  • API Docs
  • Brand Assets
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
FindMyCamp
© 2026 FindMyCamp. All rights reserved.
Glossary›Ayurveda

Glossary

Ayurveda

Ancient Indian medical system balancing mind, body, and spirit through diet, herbs, detoxification, and lifestyle based on three fundamental doshas.

What is Ayurveda?

Ayurveda is a comprehensive system of medicine originating in India more than 3,000 years ago. The term means “science of life” in Sanskrit (ayur = life, veda = knowledge or science) and represents one of the world’s oldest holistic healing traditions. Unlike conventional medicine’s focus on disease treatment, Ayurveda emphasizes prevention and balance across physical, mental, and spiritual dimensions through individualized protocols based on constitutional type.

At Ayurveda’s core lies the theory of three doshas—vata (space and air), pitta (fire and water), and kapha (earth and water)—fundamental energetic principles governing all physiological and psychological processes. Every person possesses a unique constitutional blueprint (prakriti) determined at conception, and illness arises when current imbalances (vikriti) deviate from this inherent nature. Practitioners assess tongue, pulse, eyes, skin, and digestion to diagnose doshic disturbances, then prescribe personalized regimens of diet, herbal formulas, bodywork, cleansing procedures, and daily routines (dinacharya) to restore equilibrium.

Origins & Lineage

Ayurveda’s foundational texts emerged between 1500 BCE and 500 CE, though oral traditions likely predate written records by centuries. The Charaka Samhita (circa 400–200 BCE), attributed to physician Charaka, systematizes internal medicine and diagnostics. The Sushruta Samhita (circa 600 BCE), credited to surgeon Sushruta, details surgical procedures, wound care, and anatomy. The Ashtanga Hridaya, composed by Vagbhata around 600 CE, synthesizes both earlier works into a practical compendium still studied today.

These classical texts describe eight branches (ashtanga): internal medicine (kayachikitsa), surgery (shalya tantra), head and neck disorders (shalakya tantra), toxicology (agada tantra), psychiatry (bhuta vidya), pediatrics (kaumara bhritya), rejuvenation (rasayana), and virility/reproductive health (vajikarana). Ayurveda developed alongside Vedic culture, sharing philosophical foundations with yoga and drawing from the same Upanishadic cosmology of pancha mahabhuta (five great elements) and trigunas (three qualities of nature).

During India’s colonial period, British authorities suppressed indigenous medicine in favor of Western biomedical training, nearly erasing institutional Ayurveda. Post-independence revival efforts established research institutes, standardized curricula, and government recognition. Today India’s Ministry of AYUSH oversees traditional medicine education and practice.

How It’s Practiced

An Ayurvedic consultation typically begins with detailed intake covering digestion, sleep, emotional patterns, and family history. The practitioner examines nadi pariksha (pulse diagnosis), tongue coating, skin quality, and body build to determine doshic constitution and current imbalances. Based on findings, they prescribe multi-modal interventions.

Dietary recommendations form the cornerstone: warming, grounding foods for vata types; cooling, bitter greens for pitta; light, pungent spices for kapha. Herbal formulas may include ashwagandha for stress, triphala for digestion, brahmi for cognitive clarity, or turmeric for inflammation. Panchakarma—Ayurveda’s intensive detoxification protocol—employs five cleansing actions: therapeutic vomiting (vamana), purgation (virechana), enema (basti), nasal administration (nasya), and bloodletting (raktamokshana). Abhyanga (warm oil massage), shirodhara (oil stream on forehead), and kati basti (localized oil pooling) address musculoskeletal and nervous system complaints.

Daily routines align with circadian rhythms: rising before dawn during vata time, tongue scraping, oil pulling, self-massage, meditation, and eating the main meal at midday when digestive fire (agni) peaks. Seasonal regimens (ritucharya) adjust diet and activity as external conditions shift.

Ayurveda Today

Contemporary seekers encounter Ayurveda through wellness retreats offering panchakarma programs in Kerala or Rishikesh, consultations with certified Ayurvedic practitioners (many trained at institutions like Kerala Ayurveda Academy or California College of Ayurveda), cooking classes emphasizing doshic nutrition, and product lines marketing turmeric lattes and adaptogenic herb blends. Yoga studios frequently integrate Ayurvedic principles into sequencing and dietary guidance.

Western medical research increasingly investigates Ayurvedic herbs—ashwagandha for cortisol modulation, boswellia for arthritis—though critics note methodological challenges in studying multi-component formulas designed for individualized use. In India, Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery (BAMS) degrees require five-and-a-half years of training; graduates practice alongside allopathic physicians in integrative clinics.

Common Misconceptions

Ayurveda is not simply herbalism or massage. While botanical medicine and bodywork constitute important tools, Ayurveda encompasses sophisticated diagnostic frameworks, psychological assessment, surgical tradition, and philosophical inquiry into consciousness and liberation. The system does not reject modern medicine; many practitioners advocate integrative approaches, using biomedical diagnostics alongside traditional pulse reading.

Dosha quizzes popularized online oversimplify constitutional assessment. Accurate prakriti determination requires years of training in subtle pulse qualities and observational skill. Similarly, panchakarma performed without proper preparation (oleation and sweating therapies) or supervision risks adverse effects; it is not a casual spa treatment.

Ayurveda does not promise quick fixes. Classical texts emphasize gradual transformation through sustained daily practice (abhyasa) and non-attachment (vairagya). Rejuvenation therapies (rasayana) assume a foundation of balanced agni and clear channels (srotas)—building on dysfunction yields limited results.

How to Begin

Prospective students might start with Dr. Vasant Lad’s Ayurveda: The Science of Self-Healing or Dr. Robert Svoboda’s Prakriti: Your Ayurvedic Constitution for accessible introductions to doshic theory and self-assessment. The Charaka Samhita and Sushruta Samhita are available in English translation for those seeking primary source material.

Consultations with NAMA-certified (National Ayurvedic Medical Association) practitioners provide personalized roadmaps. Many cities host Ayurvedic cooking workshops teaching kitchari preparation, spice blending, and seasonal eating. Multi-day immersions at Kripalu Center or Ayurvedic Institute combine theory with experiential practices like self-massage and tongue diagnosis. For serious study, residential programs at Kerala Ayurveda Academy or Alandi Ayurveda Gurukula offer traditional gurukula-style training under lineage holders.

Artists & teachers in this practice

Cristina DantasCristina DantasAyurvedic PractitionerAlineAlineAyurvedic PractitionerToon MuylaertToon MuylaertMeditation TeacherCassie CameronCassie CameronAyurvedic PractitionerAndrew Evonn Hart CampbellAndrew Evonn Hart CampbellAyurvedic PractitionerCorina PCorina PAyurvedic PractitionerJoe RitterJoe RitterAyurvedic PractitionerPatricia Savoi Pires Galvão CanineuPatricia Savoi Pires Galvão CanineuAyurvedic PractitionerClaireClaireAyurvedic PractitionerStacy GissalStacy GissalAyurvedic PractitionerBen GanandaBen GanandaAyurvedic PractitionerDidge TherapyDidge TherapyAyurvedic Practitioner

Related terms

vata doshapitta doshakapha doshapanchakarmaabhyangaayurvedic practitioner
All termsDiscover