Why treating symptoms is like pruning branches, while true healing requires addressing the soil and the seed.
"Disease is like a Banyan tree with many branches. Medicines only cut the leaves, but nature pulls the roots."
Imagine a massive Banyan tree, its branches spreading wide, its roots digging deep into the earth. In this metaphor, the tree represents chronic disease. The visible branches and leaves are the symptoms: the pain, the fatigue, the inflammation, and the discomfort that we feel daily.
The "Branch" approach is how conventional medicine often works. It acts like a gardener with pruning shears. When a branch (symptom) grows too large, it is cut away. You feel temporary relief. But because the root remains nourished by the same toxic soil, the branch inevitably grows back—often stronger or in a different direction.
The "Root" approach is different. The Natural Method doesn't concern itself with just the branches. It looks at why the tree is growing there in the first place. By changing the inner environment, the "soil" of your body we stop feeding the disease. Eventually, we uproot the tree entirely, ensuring it cannot return.
The Illusion of Suppression is what happens when you silence a symptom with a pill. You are not removing the disease; you are merely quieting the body's alarm system. The "tree" is still there, drawing nutrients from your vitality. True healing is a process of deep cleansing, removing the accumulation that allowed the disease to take root.
At Jaigurugiri Yogashaala, we guide you through the process of Uprooting. Through proper nutrition, yogic cleansing (Shatkriyas), and conscious living, we dry up the source of the ailment. It takes patience, as a tree with deep roots does not fall in a day, but when it does, the ground is finally clear for new, vibrant life to grow.
Symptomatic Relief
Cutting branches. Fast, but temporary. The tree remains.
Root-Cause Healing
Uprooting. Requires effort, but results in permanent freedom.
Don't spend your life trimming the symptoms. Have the courage to dig deep and find the source.
Begin the Uprooting Process