" Yoga becomes ineffective by overeating …..” A clear statement noted down at least 700 years ago in the key Hatha yoga text, Hatha Pradipika (I.15).
Mitāhara – moderate eating – then becomes the clarion call of how to manage food with a yoga practice, whether your aim is a healthier physical body or a wish to progress in meditative practice.
There is no direct advice given in any older yoga teaching that demands being a vegetarian or vegan. Though you may interpret some other aspects, as in non-violence, to mean vegetarianism, but that is a full debate of its own.
Such an approach respects food as a contributor to prāna, your own level of energy.
If you eat too much or too little you will either be bloated and heavy or weak and shaky. The Bhagavad Gita emphasizes this point: “yoga is neither for those who eat too much or eat too little.”
Photo by NordWood Themes on UnsplashAgain we are advised the middle path. Balance. If you have a hard time figuring this out look at your own energy level. It is an indicator right in front of you. If you are not feeling light, bright and energetic every day then some part or parts of your lifestyle are off. Look at:
I followed a very involved path of yogic meditative practice that included specific dietary advice in terms of how much to eat and when:
If you do not wake up fresh, need to nap a few times in the day, get tired easy, have a hard time with morning bowel movement then, regardless of yoga practice, you need to really look at the what and when, but above all how much, you eat.
If you are confused and don’t know what to do then simply EAT LESS and especially at night.
It’s so amazing and powerful that it is now in the news (1). I found when I ate less my body cleaned out more efficiently – healthier and better bowel movements. It’s like less emails in your inbox so you can finally clear what is there. In today’s scientific language we would relate that to how each cell naturally detoxifies, through “self-eating”, autophagy (2).
Not only can you assess the effects in daily energy levels and bowel movements, but if you do yoga body or breath practices you will notice a veritable difference, hence the advice. Light at night means a morning asana practice is super light and more open, a pranayama practice experiences a different level of breath holding. To aid it Hatha yogic practices of Nauli and Agni Sara are advised (3).
The approach to food I highlight above, that I have spent over 20 years doing and can vouch for based on my overall level of energy, have now caught the scientific attention of a few and made it to the public domain in quite an impressive way – impressive because they are good advice:
In addition to the body cleaning out better the cycling of eating-to-not-eating takes your body and every cell through feast and famine, clean out and restore, a mild stressor (hormesis) followed by a re-feed (which activates a pathway to build up your body anew and better).
And drink good water, enough throughout the day
References