Acidity
Symptoms
Physical weakness, acidic or watery belching, dizziness, burning
stomach, heartburn, etc.
Causes
Oxygen inhaled in breathing enters the body and eventually turns into
carbon dioxide. Through the influence of this carbon dioxide, the
digestive fluid-secreting glands are activated. If food is taken
irregularly and excessively day after day, or if food is forced down
with little or no appetite, or if eating rich food becomes a steady
habit, it becomes impossible for the digestive fluid to digest the food
properly. Then, just as on the one hand the undigested or
partially-digested food turns into poisonous gas, so on the other hand
the secreted digestive fluid gradually turns into harmful acid.
The digestive fluids are themselves acidic, but under normal conditions
when they digest food they themselves are digested. When, however, as a
result of the aforesaid irregularities, they are unable to digest the
food, the fluids themselves also remain undigested.
The cause of acidity, therefore, is the poisonous gas being produced by
the decomposed food, together with the putrid acid produced by the
deterioration of the undigested fluids.
The putrid acidic gas and fluids cause a burning sensation in the
stomach. When they rise up to the chest they cause heartburn; when they
reach the throat, burning is felt in the throat; when they rise further
they cause dizziness.
Due to this excessive acidity, the blood becomes acid-dominated. Being
overworked, the blood-purifying organs of the body also become weak, and
the patient feels weak.
This over-acidity of the blood also causes swelling and consequent pain
in different parts of the body, especially the joints. The name of this
condition is “rheumatism”.
When a strong and continuous effort is being made by the body’s organs
to purify the over-acid blood, this condition is called “colic” or
“shooting pain.”
Treatment
Morning – Utkśepa Mudrá,
Mayúrásana,
Padahastásana,
Ud́d́ayána Mudrá,
Agnisára Mudrá or
Ágneyii
Práńáyáma.
Evening – Agnisára
Mudrá, Utkat́a Pashcimottánásana,
Sarváuṋgásana and
Ágneyii
Mudrá or Ágneyii
Práńáyáma.
Diet
In acidity boiled old rice (grains a few years old), soup of green
vegetables (no vegetables fried, parched, or taken in large quantity),
juicy sweet or sour fruits, and curd-water are especially useful. Curd
(yogurt) alone is not particularly beneficial for acidity patients.
Dos and don’ts
For patients of acidity it is particularly important to walk in the open
air, to eat less food than the appetite demands, and to drink plenty of
water, in small amounts, at intervals throughout the day. Coconut and
coconut-based foods and medicines are especially useful in this disease.
Patients should refrain from eating breakfast and snacks. If the hunger
is unbearable, the patient may eat a little bit of juicy fruit. A
frequent symptom of this disease is that, due to old habits, the
digestive glands discharge an excessive quantity of fluids, as a result
of which the patient suddenly feels an extreme hunger at odd times,
which is called “demon hunger”. That is why we find that a patient who
is often in a depressed mood about his/her disease or goes around
talking about the disease to everyone, when he/she sits down to eat,
eats excessively. This symptom is the result of the secretion of
digestive fluids at a particular time in accordance with the old habits
of the patient. It is therefore desirable to be cautious about this
“demon”, detrimental hunger. An acidity patient should never violate
these dos and don’ts.
If due to the over-secretion of digestive fluids the patient suffers
from “demon hunger”, it can be relieved by drinking a large glass of
water. When the acidity patient feels pain, it is advisable to drink
orange or tangerine juice mixed in tepid water. After the pain has
subsided, lemon juice in cold water should be taken. As with dyspepsia,
during mealtime and for an hour thereafter breath should be flowing
through the patient’s right nostril.
At the time of severe colic pain, the dominant flow of breath should be
changed from the nostril through which it was flowing at the time the
pain started to the other nostril. Allowing the bile to accumulate by
not taking something when one is hungry should never be permitted,
because in that event the undigested bile itself will become the cause
of acidity.
Some remedies
1. Eat some shredded dry coconut along with a prepared betel [Piper betle Linn.]
leaf, or some flesh of mature coconut along with aniseed.
2. To get immediate relief from a distressing colic pain, equal
quantities of chalk and átapa rice
powder should be ground together, and 1/2 tola of the mixture should be
taken.
3. Take with cold water 1/16 tola of the white portion of the ashes of
the tamarind [Tamarindus indica Linn.] pod.
4. Take 1/16 tola of the ashes of white ákanda leaf
and rock salt after burning them together in equal quantities in an
enclosed earthen pot.
5. As with dyspepsia, it is desirable for acidity patients to observe
fasting on ekádashii days
and regulation of diet on púrńimá and amávasyá.
1958