Onion, lemon and salt: Acharya Balkrishna backs this three-ingredient remedy for stomach pain
Your stomach hurts and your first instinct is to reach for a tablet. Acharya Balkrishna says stop. The fix has been sitting in your kitchen the whole time.
Your stomach hurts and your first instinct is to reach for a tablet. Acharya Balkrishna says stop. The fix has been sitting in your kitchen the whole time.
Balkrishna called the moment historic and credited Modi with strengthening Indian culture, national identity, and pride on the global stage.
Summer heat drains your body faster than you think. Acharya Balkrishna says the answer has been sitting in your kitchen all along. A glass of shikanji does more than cool you down.
The heat is brutal. Your body is showing it. Acharya Balkrishna says the fix has been sitting in your kitchen all along, and it is smaller than your fist.
The vegetable most Indians push to the side of the plate is quietly doing the heaviest lifting. Acharya Balkrishna says the bitterness is not the problem. It is the point.
Balkrishna captioned the post with a Sanskrit shloka meaning "the sight of saints is meritorious." He described the early morning darshan and satsang as a moment of deep spiritual joy.
The Indian pantry has not been replaced. It has been interrogated. Every packet of atta, every tin of oil, and every jar of honey now carries a question behind it.
Discover how three ancient Ayurvedic ingredients became a multi-billion dollar global wellness phenomenon, backed by science, market data, and centuries of tradition.
Summer heat does more than make you sweat. Ayurveda saw this coming centuries ago. Sandalwood, rose water, and cucumber are the three cooling ingredients your skin needs right now.
TVs on standby keep emitting radiation even after you press the remote. Phones near your bed suppress melatonin, break your sleep cycle, and quietly build stress and depression over time.