Imagine every person has their own "factory setting" — a unique combination of energies that shapes how you think, how you get sick, what you're drawn to, and why the same diet works for your friend but does nothing for you.
What is a dosha — in plain language
In Ayurveda, everything in nature is made of five elements: earth, water, fire, air, and space. Inside the human body, these elements combine into three functional principles — three doshas.
Analogy
Think of a smartphone. There's a processor (speed), a battery (energy), and a chassis (structure). No single component works alone — balance is essential. The doshas are roughly the same thing, but for a living organism.
Doshas are not diseases, and they're not personality types. They are functional principles that govern every process in the body: movement, metabolism, the building of tissues. When they are in balance — you are healthy. When one slips out of equilibrium — symptoms appear.
A dosha is not a diagnosis. It is a description of how your body works.
Analogy
Think of a smartphone. There's a processor (speed), a battery (energy), and a chassis (structure). No single component works alone — balance is essential. The doshas are roughly the same thing, but for a living organism.
Doshas are not diseases, and they're not personality types. They are functional principles that govern every process in the body: movement, metabolism, the building of tissues. When they are in balance — you are healthy. When one slips out of equilibrium — symptoms appear.
A dosha is not a diagnosis. It is a description of how your body works.
Each dosha in real life — with examples
Let's look at each one through real, recognisable images. You'll almost certainly see people you know — or yourself.
Vata — the energy of movement
Air · Space · Speed
Vata governs everything that moves in the body: nerve impulses, breathing, blood circulation, bowel movement. It is, in essence, the principle of movement itself.
What this looks like in real life
A Vata person is that friend who's juggling three projects at once, generating five new ideas a day, always running slightly late, constantly losing their keys. They can't sit still, love travel and novelty, get excited quickly — and lose interest just as fast. Lean build, fast talker, creative but scattered.
What this looks like in real life
A Vata person is that friend who's juggling three projects at once, generating five new ideas a day, always running slightly late, constantly losing their keys. They can't sit still, love travel and novelty, get excited quickly — and lose interest just as fast. Lean build, fast talker, creative but scattered.
What triggers Vata imbalance: irregular sleep, skipped meals, cold, wind, frequent travel, information overload, too many changes happening at once.
Pitta — the energy of transformation
Fire · Heat · Digestion
Pitta is responsible for everything that gets "digested": food in the stomach, information in the mind, emotions in the psyche. It is the fire of transformation. Where Vata creates movement, Pitta creates change.
What this looks like in real life
A Pitta person is that colleague who always knows exactly what needs to be done, finishes what they start, and has zero patience for incompetence. They can flare up, but cool down quickly. Medium build, warm skin, strong appetite — "if I don't eat on time, I get irritable." A natural leader with a perfectionist streak.
What this looks like in real life
A Pitta person is that colleague who always knows exactly what needs to be done, finishes what they start, and has zero patience for incompetence. They can flare up, but cool down quickly. Medium build, warm skin, strong appetite — "if I don't eat on time, I get irritable." A natural leader with a perfectionist streak.
What triggers Pitta imbalance: spicy and fried food, alcohol, heat, competition, suppressed anger, overwork, relentless achievement pressure.
Kapha — the energy of structure
Earth · Water · Stability
Kapha is everything that holds its form: bones, tissues, joint lubrication, immune function. It is the principle of stability and nourishment. Without Kapha, the body would literally fall apart.
What this looks like in real life
A Kapha person is that friend everyone goes to for advice, because they're always calm. They take their time with decisions but, once committed, they hold firm. Heavier build, slow metabolism, loves to sleep, eats modestly — but gains weight easily. Loyal, dependable, very hard to provoke. But they hold onto hurt for a long time.
What this looks like in real life
A Kapha person is that friend everyone goes to for advice, because they're always calm. They take their time with decisions but, once committed, they hold firm. Heavier build, slow metabolism, loves to sleep, eats modestly — but gains weight easily. Loyal, dependable, very hard to provoke. But they hold onto hurt for a long time.
What triggers Kapha imbalance: sedentary lifestyle, napping during the day, heavy and sweet food, lack of novelty, suppressed emotions (especially grief).
Prakriti — your natural constitution
Prakriti (Sanskrit: "nature, original form") is your innate dosha ratio — the balance you were born with. It is set at conception and stays with you for life.
Analogy
Prakriti is like your blood type. It's determined at birth, it can't be changed, and knowing it matters — because it tells you how to eat, how to pace your life, and how your body responds to stress. It's your personal default setting.
Prakriti is neither good nor bad. It's simply your unique configuration. One person is born with dominant Vata, another with Pitta, another with Kapha. Most people are dual-doshic: Vata-Pitta, or Pitta-Kapha, for example.
Prakriti is – your nature
Innate dosha ratio. Constant. Like blood type.
Established at birth. This is your reference point — the state in which you feel most like yourself.
Vikriti is–your current state
Active imbalance. Variable. Like body temperature.
Shows which dosha is out of balance right now. This is what Ayurveda works with in practice.
Analogy
Prakriti is like your blood type. It's determined at birth, it can't be changed, and knowing it matters — because it tells you how to eat, how to pace your life, and how your body responds to stress. It's your personal default setting.
Prakriti is neither good nor bad. It's simply your unique configuration. One person is born with dominant Vata, another with Pitta, another with Kapha. Most people are dual-doshic: Vata-Pitta, or Pitta-Kapha, for example.
Prakriti is – your nature
Innate dosha ratio. Constant. Like blood type.
Established at birth. This is your reference point — the state in which you feel most like yourself.
Vikriti is–your current state
Active imbalance. Variable. Like body temperature.
Shows which dosha is out of balance right now. This is what Ayurveda works with in practice.
Vikriti — why you feel off right now
Vikriti (Sanskrit: "alteration, deviation") is the current state of your doshas — a departure from your personal baseline, your prakriti.
Analogy
Imagine a thermostat. Prakriti is the ideal temperature your home is set to. Vikriti is the actual temperature right now. Leave a window open in winter — stress, poor diet, broken sleep — and the temperature drops. Ayurveda's job is not to set one "universal" temperature for everyone, but to bring you back to yours.
The gap between prakriti and vikriti is the root of most health problems. Symptoms are signals: "one of the systems has gone out of range."
Analogy
Imagine a thermostat. Prakriti is the ideal temperature your home is set to. Vikriti is the actual temperature right now. Leave a window open in winter — stress, poor diet, broken sleep — and the temperature drops. Ayurveda's job is not to set one "universal" temperature for everyone, but to bring you back to yours.
The gap between prakriti and vikriti is the root of most health problems. Symptoms are signals: "one of the systems has gone out of range."
The goal of Ayurveda is not to bring everyone to the same standard — it is to return each person to their own norm.
How vikriti develops — a real example
Say your prakriti is Vata-Pitta. You work at a startup: chaotic schedule, short nights, too much coffee, constant deadlines. After a few months you notice: anxiety, insomnia, acid reflux, irritability, skin breakouts.
This isn't "just your personality" and it's not a coincidence. It's aggravated Vata (chaos, irregularity) plus overheated Pitta (stress, fire). That is your vikriti.
Say your prakriti is Vata-Pitta. You work at a startup: chaotic schedule, short nights, too much coffee, constant deadlines. After a few months you notice: anxiety, insomnia, acid reflux, irritability, skin breakouts.
This isn't "just your personality" and it's not a coincidence. It's aggravated Vata (chaos, irregularity) plus overheated Pitta (stress, fire). That is your vikriti.
Seven constitutions — why we're all different
Pure single-dosha types are rare. Most people are dual-doshic, and some have all three in roughly equal measure.
Important to understand
A dual-doshic constitution doesn't mean "two in one." It means you have a primary and a secondary dosha. The primary shapes you in stable conditions. The secondary is more likely to go out of balance under stress or with seasonal shifts.
A dual-doshic constitution doesn't mean "two in one." It means you have a primary and a secondary dosha. The primary shapes you in stable conditions. The secondary is more likely to go out of balance under stress or with seasonal shifts.
How Ayurveda uses this knowledge in practice
Knowing your prakriti and vikriti is not just an interesting fact about yourself. It is the core tool Ayurveda works with every single day.
1
Determine prakriti
Through a detailed intake — pulse, body type, temperament, digestion, sleep — an Ayurvedic practitioner establishes your baseline constitution.
2
Identify vikriti
Look at current symptoms: what's bothering you, how you feel right now, which patterns are dominant. This reveals what has drifted out of balance.
3
Design a correction
Food, daily rhythm, herbs, practices — all chosen specifically to calm the aggravated dosha and bring you back to prakriti. Not "healthy for everyone," but "what you need."
4
Account for the seasons
Each season amplifies a different dosha: autumn aggravates Vata, summer aggravates Pitta, spring aggravates Kapha. Your routine needs to shift with each season accordingly.
1
Determine prakriti
Through a detailed intake — pulse, body type, temperament, digestion, sleep — an Ayurvedic practitioner establishes your baseline constitution.
2
Identify vikriti
Look at current symptoms: what's bothering you, how you feel right now, which patterns are dominant. This reveals what has drifted out of balance.
3
Design a correction
Food, daily rhythm, herbs, practices — all chosen specifically to calm the aggravated dosha and bring you back to prakriti. Not "healthy for everyone," but "what you need."
4
Account for the seasons
Each season amplifies a different dosha: autumn aggravates Vata, summer aggravates Pitta, spring aggravates Kapha. Your routine needs to shift with each season accordingly.
The same symptom in two different people can have completely different causes — and may require opposite approaches. This is why universal health advice so often fails.
Doshas are not mysticism.
They are a map of your body.
Prakriti is who you are by nature. Vikriti is where you are right now. The gap between the two is the source of most health problems.
Knowing your constitution is not about labelling yourself. It's a tool — one that explains why certain things work for you and others don't, why the same advice helps your friend but leaves you worse off.
It's simply a different language for describing the human being — one that Ayurveda has been developing for thousands of years, and that modern science is only now beginning to decode.
