How We Write About Health
Health pages on Satyori are written as education, not as prescription. They describe what the world's wisdom traditions and modern clinical evidence say about a condition — what each tradition observes, what protocols appear in its texts, what trials have measured.
None of it is medical advice for any one person. None of it tells anyone what to do with their body. That distinction is the point of this page.
What These Pages Are
Reference content. The same kind of writing you would find in a careful translation of a classical text, in a Cochrane review, in a clinical pharmacology reference, or in an integrative library that takes many traditions seriously at once. The voice is descriptive: this herb is described at this dose in this text, this point is named for this function in this lineage, this trial measured this outcome at this dose.
That descriptive voice is deliberate. It lets a reader meet the material as material — something to consider, weigh, study, bring to a practitioner, try cautiously on themselves, ignore entirely if it doesn't fit — rather than as instruction.
What These Pages Are Not
Not personalized medical advice. Nothing on Satyori reads anyone's chart, takes anyone's pulse, examines anyone's tongue, sees anyone's labs, or knows what medications anyone is taking. A page that names a dose range is naming what classical or clinical literature reports — not telling the person reading it to take that dose.
Not anti-medicine, not pro-medicine. We write about what each tradition — modern medicine included — observes and tests. We don't pretend the systems are at war.
Not a religion. Not a cult. Not a guru's prescription handed down through lineage. Many of these traditions have roots in lineage, and we honor the lineages by naming them. But the writing here is open, public, cross-tradition, and accountable to evidence and to the reader's own discernment.
How To Read These Pages
As one source among several. As a starting point for questions, not as a treatment plan. Take what reads true, run it past your own discernment, your own body, the practitioners you trust. Leave what doesn't.
The doses, points, formulas, and protocols named on these pages come from real classical texts and real clinical trials, cited where they appear. They describe ranges and patterns that have been used or studied. They are not telling any reader to take any specific dose, press any specific point, or follow any specific protocol. Anyone moving from reading to practice can bring those references to a practitioner they trust — someone who knows what's compatible with what else they're taking. Herbs interact with medications. Some classical formulations contain heavy metals when made traditionally. Some protocols are inappropriate during pregnancy, in autoimmune disease, with anticoagulants, or alongside specific medications. None of this is a reason not to learn the material. It is a reason to learn it carefully.
We don't promise cures. We don't promise that any protocol works for any individual. We describe what each tradition has observed and tested.
The Editorial Posture, In One Line
Educational reference content drawn from the world's wisdom traditions and from modern clinical evidence — and trusting the reader to be the one who decides.
This is not medical advice for any individual situation.