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What's Your Dosha, Baby?

Lissa Rankin's picture

fire water earth air doshaI wrote this about a year ago and just stumbled upon it and thought I'd post it. Here you go!

I was walking in Pebble Beach with Jo Perron (who is now a Mojo Mentor), talking about my ideas for Owning Pink, a website I plan to launch that would be a guide to getting your mojo back and a way for empowered women to connect. While I was prattling on about my exciting idea, Jo piped up, “Lissa, your dosha is so Vata.” Say what? Dosha? Vata? Were we speaking Greek now?

Seeing my obvious confusion, Jo explained. In Ayurvedic medicine, based on the ancient Indian wisdom of living your life in harmony, your dosha is your Ayurveda mind & body type. Apparently, we can learn a lot about ourselves and how to live life in balance by understanding the balance of our doshas.

There are three doshas in Ayurveda: Vata, Pitta, and Kapha.

We each have all three of the doshas in our physiology, but each individual has different proportions of each, so everyone’s dosha is unique. Ayurveda explains that human being are made up of the five elements- air, space, fire, water, and earth. We breathe air to oxygenate our tissues. Space fills up the hollows in our body cavities. Fire takes place in our digestive tract, as we break down food and burn energy. Water makes up 2/3 of us, and earth makes up our bones. These elements make up the doshas. Vata is air and space, while Pitta is fire and water, and Kapha is earth and water.

A few months ago, I was talking to my mother, who was complaining that water followed her everywhere she went. Hurricanes and floods washed around her. The locals near her farm in North Georgia pray for her to come visit when they’re in the midst of a draught. She’s like their own personal rain dancer. I laughed and said that fire seemed to follow me everywhere I went.

Big Sur was burning up when I was there, then I went to Yosemite, where another big fire raged. Then only days after Yosemite, I went to Mammoth, where another wildfire burned. I told my Mom I must bring fire with me, the way she brings water. If only we spent more time together, maybe our natures would balance each other out.

So I wasn’t the least bit surprised when I took the online quiz at http://www.whatsyourdosha.com/ and discovered that I am Pitta dominant, closely followed by Vata, with Kapha trailing in last. Jo lent me her book, What’s Your Dosha, Baby? by Lisa Coffey. I read the whole thing cover to cover last week. It’s all about understanding relationships- romantic, familial, corporate, or friendly, by understanding how your dosha balance interacts with other doshas. Turns out my husband is almost completely Vata, so we get along just fine. Vata’s are creative, airy, energetic, flitty, lightning-quick, passionate chatterboxes. They tend to be thin, cold-natured, wispy types, so it’s no wonder he’s attracted to a Pitta-Vata, which is what I am. As it turns out, we Pittas put off a lot of heat. We can be sharp, articulate, methodical thinkers, who are ambitious, competitive, and strong-willed. Clearly, my Pitta was in high gear getting me through medical school, and I’ve spent the past eight years trying to give my Vata side more say in life. My ex-husband was surely a Pitta, so it’s no wonder we clashed.

Lately, I might seem a lot more Vata, with all my art and writing and creative juices flowing. But deep down, I am who I am, I guess. I'm always a bit reluctant to do quizzes like the dosha quiz. I don't like to put myself in a box or live under a label, but it's kind of fun nonetheless and does explain a few things.

We all have different personality types, and those types interact in predictable ways that are sometimes harmonious, other times discordant. Not to diminish Ayurvedic medicine or suggest that it’s some sort of MMPI approach to health care. It goes much deeper than that. In Ayurveda, they believe that certain diets promote balance of your doshas. Me, as a Pitta, I’m supposed to avoid salty, fried and spicy foods, favoring raw, cool foods, like salads, to chill me out. My Vata husband is supposed to eat sweet, salty, or sour warm, cooked foods, like soup. Funny, since his favorite thing to eat is chili. And I’m a raw foods and salad fan. Since I’m the one cooking and I’m not making two different meals, I guess our doshas will just have to be a little out of balance.

So what’s your dosha, baby? I don’t know why, but reading the book made me feel understood, as if I’m not the freak I often feel I am. Instead, I’m just a unique dosha blend. It made me feel less alone in the world, and helped me consider the people I love in my life and how they might rate on the quiz. My mother is a Kapha, I bet, with a bit of Vata.

Kapha’s are dominated by earth and water, and they are sturdy types, homebodies, loyal friends. They are tortoises- slow and steady, winning the race. They engage in long-lasting relationships and need to have a fire lit under them to get them off their butts. (Hear that Mom? Go take that hike through the park!) They are also comfort-eaters, so they’re at risk of being couch potatoes, especially if they hang out with other Kaphas. My dad was a Pitta, but he had a lot of Kapha in him too. They were a perfect match. Between the two of them, all three doshas balanced each other out.

It’s kind of fun to think about it. And maybe there’s something to the ancient Ayurveda that I can take home in my own life. Surely, eating salads will serve me well, but there’s no way I’m giving up soup and spice. When it comes right down to it, it’s all about finding balance, isn’t it? Certainly, I’ve learned a lot about that this year. My take on the whole thing? Any healing modality that promotes finding balance works for me. Pills and prescriptions and treatments and surgeries may target the resulting end problem, but they certainly don’t do much for healing the whole person. Finding balance- in your dosha or otherwise- I’m all for it.

Pitta, Vata, and lots of love,
Lissa

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Comments

Lissa Rankin's picture

Great Erin! The book is fun-

Great Erin! The book is fun- mostly about relationships and how your Ayurvedic type helps. But there are other good books out there about eating for your Ayurvedic type- and the book does go over it...

Good to know you're listening to your body and you're body is talking!

Erin's picture

I read this post last night -

I read this post last night - at exactly the right time! I have been working towards "eating real food" as much as possible and in August I really stepped it up, but felt off for most of the month. I thought it was because my body was detoxing, but this past weekend I abandoned the "eat real food" diet because I was visiting my brother in NYC. (I'm realistic and comfortable with eating some processed foods every now and then. And New York style pizza and club sandwiches and whatever.) But here is the hilarious part - I felt FANTASTIC. It was like my body clicked back into place. My digestion went back to normal, I had lots of energy, and it was awesome.

So I read this post last night and took the quiz, then looked through the information the website provided. (I'm mainly Vita.) As I read through the recommended diet for Vitas, everything in me screamed YES YES YES. It was nice validation to what my instincts were already telling me... I will still eat as much real food as possible, but I need to do it differently than I have been. No wonder I was feeling so off!

Thanks for this post, I'm going to grab that book and read it. Fascinating stuff!

Lissa Rankin's picture

Yes, Mom, I see your pitta

Yes, Mom, I see your pitta too. Take the quiz! I'm curious! http://www.whatsyourdosha.com/

And good for you about taking the walk and caring for your body. I love you, Mom!

trish's picture

Thank you for that, Lissa.

Thank you for that, Lissa. But I think I'm a lot more Pitta than you want to admit. YOu and I have such similar personalities. We do fill a room, just as Siena does. It's being passed on down. But since Daddy is gone, I do have more Kapha than I used to. Grief will do that, so will fear. But I promise I will take the walk. I've committed to cutting down on sugar. I went all day without a trace of sugar today, then rewarded myself with a little at nine. Tomorrow, I hope to skip the reward too. I am ready. It's time to begin again.

Lissa Rankin's picture

Funny, as a child, I was

Funny, as a child, I was definitely more pitta emotionally but more vata physically. The older I get, the more vata I am...

Shannon Elsom's picture

I enjoyed this. I actually

I enjoyed this. I actually practiced massage in a shared space with an ayurvedic doctor who runs the ayruvedic association for California, Mamta Landerman. She determined my prakruti, (my essential nature when in balance), and said that I am a rare example of a one dosha type, but since I was out of balance at the time, she couldn't determine if I am a one dosha vata or pitta. Most people are combo types like you mentioned, but every once in awhile, there is a rare bird like me dominated by just one dosha.

I'm still trying to figure it out. They say you should look back to your childhood to determine your prakruti. Well... when I was a child, I was vata all the way... no doubt about that. However, I can understand Mamta's confusion in determining my type as I have had imbalanced health for awhile and that throws things off. These days, as an adult, I am far more pitta. Is this my true nature that just took time to emerge, or the result of dosha imbalance? Still searching, but I think it will be interesting to see as my health comes into balance what my true dosha nature is.

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