Normal.dotm
0
0
1
196
1120
9
2
1375
12.256
When visiting an Ayurvedic
Practitioner, he or she will ask you to stick out your tongue. This isn’t to look at the back of your
throat, as a western doctor might do, but to actually look at the tongue
itself. We can learn a lot from
the tongue. This is an organ that
serves two purposes – it is the organ of speech, and it also a sensory organ
that perceives taste. From the
tongue, a skilled practitioner can get information about the whole body. A vata tongue is thin, small, and often
a little dry. A pitta tongue is
broad at the base and tapered at the apex. A kapha tongue is large, round, glossy, thick and wet. If a tongue is pale in color, this
indicates anemia. A yellowish
tongue may indicate jaundice, or some type of liver dysfunction. A green tongue indicates a gallbladder
disorder. A blue or purple tongue
is indicative of heart problems. A
central line near the tip of the tongue indicates pain in the upper spine, and
two lines shows pain in the upper neck area; both of these are common vata
disorders. A healthy tongue will
look clean and pink, with no white coating. Many people have a slight coating on the back of the tongue,
which indicates toxins in the color.
Digestion continues through the night, so it is a good idea to scrape
the tongue early in the morning to massage the areas related to the digestive
organs.