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Malas - Body Wastes
Another important factor in maintaining good health
is the proper elimination of wastes; faeces, urine, and sweat [miscellaneous
wastes includes tears (eye), spit (tongue), oily secretions (skin),
mucoid secretions (mucus membrane), and smegma (excreta from genitalia).
Malas (body wastes) help maintain the proper functioning of our
organs.
Faeces (purisha) provide support and tone to the
body along with maintaining the temperature of the colon. Improper
functioning can lead to Vayu illnesses like worry, fear, a feeling
of being ungrounded, nervousness, headaches, gas, distention and
constipation. Proper elimination of the faeces is damaged by the
excessive use of purgatives, colonics, worry, and fear (fear can
create both improper functioning or be a byproduct of this dysfunction).
It is also damaged by excessive travel, the wrong foods (such as
junk food or foods that are too light or too heavy), oversleeping,
coffee, drugs, antibiotics, insufficient exercise and prolonged
diarrhea. In Ayurvedic literature, it has been clearly stated that
debilitated persons suffering from tuberculosis should not be given
any kind of purgatives, as it is the feces that maintain the temperature
of such persons.
Urine (mutra) expels water and other solid wastes
from the body. Poor urine elimination results in bladder pain or
infection, difficult urination, fever, thirst, dry mouth, or dehydration.
It is affected by diuretic drugs, alcohol, excessive sex, trauma,
fright or intake of too few liquids.
Sweat (sweda) controls the body temperature by expelling excess
water and toxins, cools the body, moistens the skin and hair, carries
away excess fat from the body and purifies the blood. Excess sweating
can cause skin diseases (usually Pitta related) like eczema, boils,
fungus, burning skin, dehydration, fatigue or convulsions (caused
by Vayu). Deficient sweating can result in stiff hair, skin fissures,
dry skin, dandruff, wrinkles or susceptibility to colds and flu
(i.e., peripheral circulation). Sweating is damaged by eating too
many dry foods, lack of salt, excessive or deficient exercise,
and excessive use of diaphoretic herbs or excess sweating.
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