Tag: wellness

  • The 5am Version of Me Knows Things I Don’t Yet Know

    There’s a very specific kind of silence that only exists at 5am.

    It’s not peaceful in the cinematic, soft-focus, birds-starting-to-sing kind of way. Not at first.

    It’s more like absence.
    Of noise. Of people. Of identity.

    And for a moment, you meet yourself without anything added.

    There’s a negotiation that happens in that space:

    Why are we awake. Why are we doing this. Who decided this was a good idea.

    But I go anyway.

    I run. I train. I move.

    Alone.

    No notifications. No meetings. No one needing anything. No one performing urgency at me through a screen.

    Just the gym lights. The road. The rhythm of movement.

    And then something shifts.

    Not dramatically. Not emotionally.

    Just… the mind stops resisting being there.

    And in that space, it becomes available.

    The untangling you don’t plan for

    There’s a kind of mental static that builds quietly.

    Not chaos. Not crisis.

    Just accumulation.

    Unfinished thoughts. Conversations replayed too many times. Decisions not fully owned. Questions that stayed open because there was never enough stillness to close them properly.

    And then I run.

    Or train.

    Or move.

    And something simple happens.

    The noise loses structure.

    Not all at once. Not in insight or revelation.

    More like tension leaving a system that no longer needs to hold it.

    A conversation stops repeating itself.

    A decision stops feeling heavy.

    A question stops demanding urgency.

    Not because it’s solved.

    But because I’m no longer standing in relation to it the same way.

    Anxiety doesn’t vanish. It loses authority.

    I don’t want to romanticise this.

    Nothing disappears.

    Stress still exists. Anxiety still exists. Life still exists.

    But in motion, they lose command.

    They stop presenting themselves as truth.

    They become what they actually are: mental weather passing through something that doesn’t need to react to every change in temperature.

    And something in me stops participating.

    I leave it there.

    Not as a decision.

    More as a natural release.

    Like setting something down because I’ve carried it long enough.

    What replaces the noise

    What replaces it is not clarity.

    Not insight.

    Not resolution.

    It’s presence.

    The simplest possible state.

    Unedited. Unperformed. Unexplained.

    There’s curiosity too, but not the kind that interrogates life.

    The kind that allows it to unfold without resistance.

    Less grasping. Less interpreting. Less forcing meaning onto everything.

    Just being there for it.

    The 5am meeting

    It turns out the most honest meeting I have each day isn’t on my calendar.

    It starts at 5am.

    No agenda.

    No slides.

    No performance.

    Just a return.

    Like arriving fully present in mind, body and soul onto a yoga mat, before you begin.

    Like Roark in that moment of stillness before the world asks him to explain himself.

    Like entering cold water before thought has a chance to resist.

    A quiet arrival back into myself before the world asks me to be anything else.

    Not to fix myself.

    Not to prove myself.

    Just to meet myself – properly.

    And somehow, every single time, I leave with exactly what I needed.

    Not answers.

    Just that feeling of being fully back inside my own life again.

  • Asafoetida: The spice that smells Like trouble but saves your tummy

    Let’s talk about a spice that’s like the quirky aunt at a family gathering – loud, slightly offensive, but ultimately the unsung hero of the day. Meet Asafoetida, pronounced asa-pho-dita (yes, it’s a mouthful – and trust me, you’ll remember it once you’ve smelled it). In simpler circles, we just call it hing, which feels less like a tongue twister and more like a quick fix.

    Now, you might not know asafoetida by name, but if you’ve ever walked into an Indian restaurant and been hit with that signature aroma – pungent, earthy, and utterly unapologetic – you’ve already met its alter ego. This spice is the reason your favourite dal and curries taste like warm, flavourful hugs. But wait – there’s more!

    From the spice rack to your medicine cabinet

    In a world overflowing with stress, anxiety, and the dreaded TMI-inducing tummy troubles (ahem, bloating, gas, constipation), Asafoetida comes in swinging like a digestive superhero. Forget sprinting to the pharmacy the next time your gut acts up. Just sprinkle a pinch of this smelly miracle worker into your food, and it might just revolutionise your relationship with digestion.

    Not convinced? Let me take you back to its roots. In Ayurveda—India’s ancient system of medicine built on the philosophy that “food is medicine” – Asafoetida is a cornerstone. Growing up in a household steeped in this belief, I learned that healing begins in the kitchen. Why pop pills when you can stir up solutions in a pot, right?

    The great (smelly) paradox

    Here’s the thing: Asafoetida has a reputation. It’s got a smell so distinct that it will make you question your choices… until you taste the end result. That aroma? It’s supposed to be strong. Think of it like tough love for your senses. The magic lies in how that pungency mellows into a rich, savoury flavour that ties your dish together. It’s the spice equivalent of “don’t judge a book by its cover.”

    How to use it without clearing the room

    The trick to handling hing is moderation. A pinch is all you need. Fry it lightly in a bit of oil to temper its raw edge, and you’ll unlock a layer of flavour that makes your lentils, beans, and even stir-fries sing. Bonus: your stomach will thank you. It’s like having a two-for-one deal – delicious food and better digestion.

    Why your gut needs Hing

    Here’s the science-y bit: Asafoetida is a natural anti-flatulent (you’re welcome), antispasmodic, and digestive aid. It’s been used for centuries to treat bloating, gas, and other stomach grumbles. And let’s face it, in today’s fast-food, stress-filled world, our guts could use all the help they can get.

    A Call to Action (and a pinch of humour)

    So, the next time you’re reaching for the antacids or dashing to the pharmacy aisle in search of relief, stop and think: What if the answer was in my spice rack all along? Give Asafoetida a try. It might just be the stinky little secret to a happier gut—and a happier you.

    Sure, it smells like trouble, but it’s also the spice that could save your day. And let’s be honest, wouldn’t you rather smell a little funky for a hot minute than deal with a grumpy digestive system all day?

    Now, go forth, sprinkle wisely, and let asafoetida work its smelly, magical wonders. Your tummy will thank you.