Most people think illness begins in the body. Yogic science says it begins much earlier: in the mind.

According to yogic science, disease starts when the mind becomes unstable. First the vichaar (thoughts) get polluted, then achaar (actions), and eventually vyavhaar (behaviour). Over time, repeated negative behaviour and emotional patterns become deep-rooted beliefs. Yogic science calls these mental disturbances Adhis – illnesses of the mind. When these remain unresolved for long, they slowly manifest in the body as Vyadhis– physical diseases.
A simple example from everyday life:
Imagine a child repeatedly hearing:
“You are not good enough.”
“You can never do this properly.”
Initially, it is just a sentence. But slowly the mind starts believing it. The thought changes. Confidence drops. Fear and anxiety increase. The person begins overthinking, comparing, pleasing others or constantly doubting themselves.
This is Adhi taking shape.
Years later, the same person may struggle with insomnia, high blood pressure, migraines, acidity, panic attacks or chronic fatigue. The body is now expressing what the mind carried for years.
This is Vyadhi.
That is why allopathic medicine is extremely valuable for immediate relief. It helps stabilise the body symptoms. But for lasting healing, yogic science emphasises meditation, self-awareness and most importantly,ly pranayama that work on balancing the mind.
Why Pranayama?
Because prana is the life force energy carried through breath. It is the bridge between body and mind. When the mind is disturbed, breathing changes. When breathing becomes calm and balanced, the mind also begins to settle.
A disturbed breath creates a disturbed nervous system. A balanced breath creates emotional regulation, mental clarity and healing begins there.
Healing, therefore, is not only about treating symptoms. It is about cleansing the chain from thought to behaviour to body.