
Dear reader, I greet you with a steady breath and a sincere heart as we begin this healing conversation together.
Last month in my clinic, I met a young mother (I’ll call her Anita) who came for headaches and fatigue; as we spoke, I noticed the deeper pattern—tight breath, relentless thoughts, skipped meals, and late nights after the children slept, all fueled by worry about work and family; together we began with small shifts—two minutes of soft nasal breathing every hour, an earlier bedtime twice a week, a mindful meal at lunch—and within weeks, the headaches eased, her patience with her children returned, and remarkably, she reported clearer decisions at work and fewer financial mistakes; this is the truth I have learned over decades as a physician and as the founder of SaiSankalpam.com: holistic health is not just about the body—it is the energetic foundation that supports every other pillar of life.
Here is how I invite you to see the Five Pillars of Success through the lens of health: – Health: When vitality rises and mind–body harmony steadies the nervous system, emotional balance follows; better heart-rate variability, calmer breath, and stable glucose form your daily energy base. – Relationships: With a regulated nervous system, patience, empathy, and presence become natural; safety in the body allows you to listen without defensiveness and to speak with kindness. – Financial Wisdom: Clear energy fosters clarity and discipline; less stress reduces impulsive spending, improves planning, and supports thoughtful choices under pressure. – Knowledge: Focus, memory, and enthusiasm bloom when inflammation and sleep debt fall; the brain learns best when the body is calm, fed, and well-rested. – Inner Peace: Stillness, breath, and spiritual grounding deepen as the body finds rhythm; regular practices anchor your attention in the heart, not in fear.
I teach the T.E.A.R. formula as a simple, compassionate map: – Thoughts: Direct the nervous system; a kind, accurate inner voice lowers cortisol and activates the parasympathetic system. – Energy: Stabilizes emotions and physiology; balanced breath, glucose, sleep, and movement create steady fuel for your day. – Actions: Become disciplined and compassionate when energy is steady; routines feel doable, not forced. – Results: Lead to well-being and spiritual growth; consistent, loving actions create health, resilience, and purpose.
Two triangles help us remember the flow of influence: Triangle 1 Thoughts → generate → Energy
Triangle 2 Energy → guides → Actions → creating → Results
How these triangles shape your life: – Physical health: Supportive thoughts reduce sympathetic overdrive, improving blood pressure, gut motility, and immune balance; steady energy enables consistent movement, sleep, and nourishment. – Emotional balance: Calmer thoughts soften the amygdala’s reactivity; stable energy prevents mood swings; compassionate actions build trust and connection in relationships. – Spiritual depth: When the body is regulated, attention can rest in silence; energy no longer leaks into survival fights, so prayer, japa, or meditation sink deeper.
As Bhagawan Sri Sathya Sai Baba reminds us, “Health is wealth; peace of mind is happiness; Yoga is the way.” To me, “Yoga” here includes any practice that unites breath, awareness, and loving action.
Practical daily health techniques I use with patients and in my own life: – Breathing pause for nervous system reset: Every hour, I take 6 slow nasal breaths—4 seconds in, 6–8 seconds out—shoulders soft, jaw relaxed; this stimulates the vagus nerve, lowers heart rate, and improves heart-rate variability, often within 1–2 minutes. – Mindful meal practice: Before eating, I pause for 3 breaths and silently appreciate the food; I put the fork down between bites and chew thoroughly; this activates the “cephalic phase” of digestion, improves insulin response, and reduces overeating; I’ve seen headaches and afternoon crashes fade when patients adopt this. – Gratitude walk: A 10–15 minute evening stroll, eyes gently scanning the horizon, naming three genuine gratitudes; gentle movement improves glucose disposal and vascular health, while gratitude shifts attention networks in the brain toward safety and connection. – Early sleep ritual: I set an “anchor” bedtime 3 nights a week, dim lights an hour before, and keep phones out of the bedroom; even partial consistency restores melatonin rhythm, supports glymphatic brain cleansing, and improves memory and mood. – Hydration with awareness: On waking, I drink a glass of water with a pinch of minerals and take three calming breaths; proper hydration stabilizes plasma osmolality, supports attention, and reduces stress-induced headaches; the breaths ensure the body receives water in a relaxed state.
From my spiritual journey, I’ve learned that science and devotion are not separate; when you breathe kindly, eat attentively, walk gratefully, rest adequately, and hydrate with awareness, you honor the body as a living shrine and invite grace into daily routines; the T.E.A.R. formula then becomes a devotional practice—thoughts as prayer, energy as prana, actions as seva, results as inner freedom.
If you remember only one thing, let it be this: you don’t have to fix everything—stabilize energy first, and the pillars will align; one compassionate breath, one mindful bite, one early night, one grateful step; small, loving consistencies are stronger than occasional heroic efforts.
“Start the day with love; spend the day with love; end the day with love; this is the way to God.” — Sathya Sai Baba
Please share your thoughts, reflections, or questions in the comment box below. I value every comment and read each one with love and gratitude.
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