Ayurvedic Morning Routine | 6 Rituals for a Calm and Centered Day
Updated: 7 days ago
What is an Ayurvedic Morning Routine? Here’s everything you need to know about how to build and benefit from an Ayurvedic Morning Routine.
Explore more Ayurveda on the Saumya Blog, selected top Ayurveda blogs and website.
According to Ayurveda, dinacharya - or daily routine - is integral to our physical, mental, and spiritual wellbeing. Making space for meaningful rituals helps us ride the waves of energetic shifts throughout the day.
An Ayurvedic morning routine lays the foundation for a grounded, focused day. Here’s how to tune into the rhythm of the universe from the moment you open your eyes.
Enjoy our video on, A Beginner's Guide to Ayurvedic Morning Routine.
Why build an Ayurvedic morning routine?
Our lives are a reflection of the small choices we make each day – how we treat ourselves, spend our time, and direct our energy. Unfortunately, in our busy modern world, it’s easy to feel spread thin or swamped with endless obligations.
When we’re stressed and overwhelmed, we don’t always make the best decisions for our physical and mental health. This trends our bodies towards illness and imbalance over time. As a result, we may develop “lifestyle diseases” like diabetes, obesity, and heart disease. We might just also feel blah, disconnected, and uninspired.
An Ayurvedic morning routine sets the tone for a healthy, centered day. It doesn’t need to be complicated. By creating a few rituals that work for you, you can harness the energetic rhythm of the day for greater overall wellbeing.
Doshic Energy and Your Ayurvedic Morning Routine
An Ayurvedic morning routine aligns us with the changing doshic energies in our environments. In Ayurveda, the three doshas - Pitta, Kapha, and Vata - dominate different hours of the day. Small daily rituals, done at an intentional hour, help us flow with these bio-energetic forces – rather than struggle against them.
Vata: 2 a.m. - 6 a.m. (and 2 p.m. - 6 p.m.)
Airy Vata rules the wee hours of the morning. Waking up at peak Vata hour helps us rise with greater vigor. These early hours are a great time to eliminate and detoxify, as well as perform grounding practices like meditation and breathwork.
Kapha: 6 a.m. - 10 a.m. (and 6 p.m. - 10 p.m.)
Try to start your day before heavy Kapha rolls around. Otherwise, it can be a bit like waking in molasses, and you may feel off and dull throughout the day. Kapha energy is best harnessed for knocking mundane items off your to-do list – or getting the heart pumping with a bit of light exercise.
"Waking before Kapha kicks in, we catch the natural movement of Vata and our minds are clearer and our energy is increased." - Veena, Saumya Ayurveda
Pitta: 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. (and 10 p.m. - 2 a.m.)
Vigorous Pitta energy is ruled by fire and water. Make the most of Pitta by using these hours for focused productivity. For instance, if accounting is challenging, do it between 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. when Pitta’s sharp mental qualities are at their strongest.
Ayurvedic Morning Routine: 6 Rituals to Start Your Day
The most important part of an Ayurvedic morning routine? Do what feels best for you. It’s about finding a few key rituals that provide you the most support – not following a set of rules.
You can think of your Ayurvedic morning routine as six simple rituals:
Wake at a supportive hour
Cleanse and clear
Ground and breathe
Eat a dosha-balancing breakfast
Get moving!
Take your herbs
1. Wake at a Supportive Hour
The hour at which you rise is one of the most important principles of an Ayurvedic morning routine. When we wake at the most supportive time, we catch a wave of energy versus struggling and swimming upstream.
The ideal wake-up schedule varies by dosha and with the seasons. But, in general:
If you start your day before sunrise, you can harness the light, expansive quality of Vata hour. Vata rules movement and helps get us going. Even spending just a few moments in this energy can spark a powerful shift in your day.
After waking, take a few deep breaths and welcome your body, mind, and spirit into another day. Connect with your breath with gentle diaphragmatic breathing – which nostril is more open? You may also take a moment to self-reflect, express gratitude, or journal.
2. Cleanse and Clear
Just as we sweep the entryway to our home, it’s important to cleanse our bodies and minds. The following rituals help clear gunk - or ama - in our system. These practices are best done just after sunrise, when Kapha’s grounding energy aids purification and self-care.
Normal morning activities become cleansing rituals when we infuse them with intention. As you brush your teeth, wash your face, bathe, or drink a glass of warm water – consider how they purify and rejuvenate your energetic life force.
Tongue Scraping
Have you ever stuck your tongue out in the mirror and noticed a filmy white coating? This is a buildup of ama, or toxins. Daily tongue scraping helps remove bacteria, improves bad breath, and keeps our body from reabsorbing this harmful oral gunk. It also provides a gentle - yet stimulating - massage of the internal organs.
Saumya Ayurveda’s guide to tongue scraping shares a simple how-to for this powerful practice – and dives deeper into the benefits.
Oil Pulling
Another way to cleanse oral ama (toxins) is by oil pulling. You can think of oil pulling as an Ayurvedic mouthwash that supports a clear mind and healthy sinuses. The process is simple:
Put one tablespoon of sesame oil in your mouth. Sesame oil is considered the King of Oils and it is what is used for oil pulling traditionally.
Begin swishing the oil through your teeth and gums as you would any mouthwash
Continue swishing for 15 - 20 minutes (You can start with few minutes and work up)
If your oil quickly changes color and consistency, spit it out and start again the next day. Otherwise, you’ll be swishing with - and recirculating - ama gunk.
After swishing, spit the oil in the trash or toilet (spitting in the sink can clog your drain)
Take care not to swallow to avoid re-ingesting the toxins and bacteria
Garshana/Dry Brushing
Dry brushing, known as garshana, is a traditional Ayurvedic treatment one can do at home. Dry brushing promotes movement of lymph which is a passive system. According to the Cleveland Clinic, the lymphatic system is part of the immune system responsible for fluid balance, defending the body against infection, and removing cellular waste.
Skin being our largest organ of digestion, it is also the largest detoxifying organ we have. This is why garshana, dry brushing, is such an important Ayurvedic treatment.
Follow dry brushing with Abhyanga massage. To learn more about dry brushing and how to performs this detoxifying and invigorating Ayurveda treatment at home, click here.
Benefits of Ayurvedic Dry Brushing | Garshana: 1. Promotes lymph flow/drainage
2. Gently supports detoxification
3. Improves healthy circulation and blood flow
4. May reduce the appearance of accumulated cellulite
5. Supports weight management
6. Improves skin texture
7. Exfoliates rough, dry skin
8. Helps to unclog pores improving the body’s ability to sweat and eliminate toxins (ama)
9. A naturally invigorating way to get the juices flowing especially in the morning.
10. Supports detoxification of the liver
11. Removes stagnation
12. Prepares the body for abhyanga/Ayurvedic herbalized oil massage.
Abhyanga Massage
Daily Abhyanga massage is an expression of self-love. Beyond this, the benefits are many. It nourishes your body and skin, aids circulation, eliminates impurities, and balances your body, mind, and spirit.
“One should practice Abhyanga as a meditation. As you massage, observe the experience. The movement of the hands. The feel of the warm oil. The relaxation of the muscles during the massage. The flow and sensation of the breath.”
--Veena, Saumya Ayurveda
This blog covers the basics of performing Abhyanga self-massage. You can modify your ritual to fit your morning – but even a full body massage need only take a few minutes before you shower.
Nasya Oil
Nasya oil treatment is a form of inner-cleansing that involves applying herbalized oils to our nasal passages. Nasya oil is infused with herbs that support the sinus, nose, throat, and head, and balance all doshas.
A regular Nasya treatment supports our overall well-being. Anointing our nose lubricates the nasal passages and provides subtle moisture to our breath. It can also help with allergies and sinus conditions, and boost focus and mental clarity.
This blog unpacks how to use Nasya oil for better focus, reduced stress, improved breathing, and greater health.
“Your nasya oil really had a strong, positive effect on my life. My mind was racing, and I have been highly stressed for a long time. I did the nasya and suddenly all went quiet. I felt like meditating. Your nasya oil really calmed the mind.”
- Anonymous, New Mexico
3. Move, Breathe, and Reflect
Yog-asana/Movement
Yog-asana refers to the physical postures of yogic practice. Morning yog-asana stimulates the digestive fire (agni) and prepares your body for a healthy breakfast. It also releases stress and tension and energizes the body and mind.
Surya Namaskar (sun salutation) is the chief morning yog-asana. This series of 12 gentle poses opens you to greet and internalize the sun into your own system.
Related Resources: 18 morning yoga stretches to start your day
According to Harvard Health, walking offers several health promoting benefits, including lowering blood pressure and cholesterol and relieving depression. Read here about more benefits from Harvard University.
Pranayama Breathwork
How we breathe changes how energy - or prana - moves through our bodies. All dosha types can benefit from two basic pranayama, or breathwork practices: diaphragmatic breathing and alternate nostril breathing (Nadi shodhana).
To make pranayama part of your Ayurvedic morning routine, start with regular diaphragmatic breathing. Once you’ve established a strong practice, add alternate nostril breathing to your morning ritual. (Sequence is key: Nadi shodhana should be performed after diaphragmatic breathwork.)
These simple pranayama techniques are accessible to all. Before taking on more advanced breathwork, consult an experienced Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner to determine your Virkruti (current dosha state) and avoid potential harm.
Benefit from our popular article: Ayurveda Breathwork Pranayama
Meditation Practice
Morning meditation helps you awaken and carry a relaxed awareness throughout your day. Pranayama prepares the body to go deeper into the meditative state, so meditation is best done following breathwork (even a few minutes counts!)
“It is the quality of the pranayama (breathwork) that is important, not the quantity” - Veena, Saumya Ayurveda
Start with Saumya Ayurveda’s two-minute or 11-minute guided relaxation meditations. For those who wish to move deeper into inner-stillness, continue on to the 31 Point Blue Star practice.
4. Eat a Dosha-Balancing Breakfast
In Ayurveda, food is medicine. What and how you eat doesn’t just nourish your body. It can shape your entire life.
“When you eat, just eat. Sit down. Quiet yourself by observing your breath for a few inhalations and exhalations. Feel your feet on the ground. Be grateful for your food, and how it will support your health physically, mentally, and spiritually.
"Chew your food well and eat with awareness of the experience, rather than gulping it down. The taste, texture, the action of chewing, of lifting the fork to your mouth. Eating is a meditation." Use our two minute meditation before each of your meals to prepare the mind and body for optimal enjoyment and digestion. Each meal becomes an eating meditation."
--Veena, Saumya Ayurveda
For all dosha types, foods are best when cooked, eaten warm, spiced, and freshly made. Beyond this, we benefit from morning meals attuned to our doshic composition.
Vata Breakfast – Dense and Moist
Stir fried root vegetables (ex: sweet potato; carrots; beet) with ghee-fried egg
Oatmeal in plant-based milk; with a pinch of cinnamon and/or cumin, and a touch of maple syrup and/or nut butter
Stewed fruits (ex: pears or apples) with cinnamon and nutmeg
Pitta Breakfast – Cooling and Dry
Basmati rice or oatmeal with plant-based milk; topped with sunflower or pumpkin seeds.
Whole-grain toast with avocado or fresh fruit preserves
Chia pudding with plant-based milk and a dash of maple syrup (or other natural sweetener)
Kapha Breakfast – Light and Dry
Bitter greens (ex: kale; arugula; chard) lightly sauteed in ghee
Warm cereals with a drizzle of honey or maple syrup
Fresh seasonal fruit – stewed, juiced, or blended into a smoothie
5. Get Moving!
One of the best rituals you can add to your Ayurvedic morning routine is a brief nature walk after breakfast. Getting outside has numerous health benefits, including reduced stress and depression, improved breathing, and better sleep.
A morning walk is perfection for all. Vata types can glide along an easy stroll. Pitta types can speed it up a touch. And Kapha types can shake energetic heaviness with a vigorous power walk.
Exercise, even light movement, makes us healthier, stronger, and more energetic. If you can’t get outside, a brief sequence of Qi Gong or Tai Chi can get your blood pumping and clear the mind.
To learn more about the benefits of walking according to Harvard University Medical School, click here.
Walking is "...the closest thing we have to a wonder drug," in the words of Dr. Thomas Frieden, former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention."
6. Take Your Herbs
As with all herbs, the tenet of Ayurveda is that what works well for one person may be incorrect for another. To know what herbs are correct for you, schedule a consultation with a seasoned Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner.
Herbal remedies are a key component of an Ayurvedic morning routine. But the best regimen is laser-specific to each person. Consult an experienced Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner to find the right herbal supplements that suit your body constitution, or doshic picture.
There is a saying, "The mind is more in the body, than the body is in the mind." The Saumya 3 Step Meditation Process shifts us from fight-flight-freeze mode, to rest-restore-relax mode. Give it a try for forty days and observe the changes. The more grounded and relaxed we are, the smoother life flows.
"The breath is the connection between the mind and body, so by training the breath, we become calm, focused, and grounded, we slow down the aging process by decreasing stress. These practices are so simple and easy to have as part of our daily life. We actually feel and look younger."
- Veena, Saumya Ayurveda
1. Learn Diaphragmatic Breathing and Change Your Life. When we re-learn to breath diaphragmatically, we move from the flight-fight-freeze mode, to rest, restore, relaxation mode from where we want and need to live.
2. Daily Guided Practices: 11 minutes in the morning and in the evening, as anchors of your daily Ayurveda routine.
3. Ayurveda Daily Routines:
"Choose a couple of practices from the routines that provide you with the greatest support. Perform them while applying our two minute meditation technique and your mundane tasks, just transformed into a mellifluous meditation. This is meditation applied to daily life." - Veena, Saumya Ayurveda
“Veena was able to help me regain my energy in just a few months and I’m feeling like my “young” self again! I love the food plan she designed for me, and all the supporting practices (am/pm routines, breathing techniques, herbs, and spice mixes) are so enjoyable to incorporate into my day. I highly recommend Saumya Ayurveda if you want to feel better and have more vitality.”
-Molly Rossini, Minnesota
Ayurvedic Morning Routine | 6 Rituals for a Calm and Centered Day
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MEET VEENA: YOUR AYURVEDIC GUIDE
Veena is a Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner and meditation teacher, and monk.
She is President Emeritus and teaching faculty of the Meditation Center.
Veena fell in love with the traditional medicine used in her family’s home, learning herbal remedies at her grandmother's knee.
An experienced Certified Ayurvedic Practitioner, Veena’s deep, intuitive knowledge of Ayurveda empowers her clients to reclaim their fullest, most vibrant lives –mentally, physically, and spiritually.
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Part of our morning routine is to get moving. Jazz's, our Chief Compassion Companion, favorite way to start the day is with a vigorous hill climbing session topped off with a few minutes of sitting atop a big boulder and paws-ing to take a few deep, diaphragmatic breaths.
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