Samya Ayurveda Podcast

PODCAST · health

Samya Ayurveda Podcast

The Samya Ayurveda Podcast explores the depth of Ayurveda as a complete system of medicine and its growing presence in Canada. Hosted by Shaughn Jenson of Samya Ayurveda Inc., each episode features Ayurvedic practitioners and members of the Ayurveda Association of British Columbia, discussing its clinical applications, specialties, and continued relevance in modern health.

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    Episode 4: Practicing Ayurveda in Canada with Vaidya Dinal Khatri MD (India) — Scope, Ethics & Integration

    In this episode of the Samya Ayurveda Podcast, Shaughn Jenson, Registered Advanced Ayurvedic Practitioner speaks with Vaidya Dinal Khatri, MD (India) about what it means to practice Ayurveda responsibly in Canada.As a classically trained Vaidya with advanced education in Dravyaguna Vigyana, Dinal brings a grounded perspective on the difference between practicing Ayurveda in India and working within Canada’s wellness and regulatory environment.Together, they explore the misconceptions surrounding Ayurveda in Canada, including the reduction of Ayurveda to herbs, supplements, short courses, or spiritual practices.The conversation also examines scope of practice, ethical communication, professional standards, herbal responsibility, and the risks of presenting limited training or association membership as professional competency.A major focus of the episode is the need to preserve the depth of Ayurveda while translating it appropriately for the Canadian context — especially in areas such as herbology, Ayurvedic bodywork, Panchakarma-related therapies, education, mentorship, and integration with modern healthcare.Topics include:• The difference between Ayurveda in India and Canada• Why scope of practice and language matter• Misconceptions among the public and emerging practitioners• The risks of short certificates and self-appointed titles• Ayurvedic bodywork, Panchakarma, and manual therapy boundaries• Dravyaguna, herbal responsibility, and self-prescribing risks• Collaboration with modern healthcare providers• Education, mentorship, and the future of Ayurveda in CanadaThis episode offers a thoughtful discussion for students, practitioners, educators, and anyone interested in the responsible development of Ayurveda in Canada.

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    Episode 3: The Biological Terrain - Part 4: Systemic Regulation, Disease Progression, Autophagy, Stress & Ayurveda

    This is Part 4 of The Biological Terrain: A Systems Dialogue on Cancer Prevention—a systems-level exploration of how disease develops and how prevention operates across the body.In this final episode, we examine cancer prevention through the lens of systemic regulation, integrating modern biomedical concepts with Ayurvedic frameworks to understand how health is maintained—and how it is gradually lost.Rather than focusing on isolated risk factors, this discussion explores how metabolism, immune function, stress physiology, circadian rhythm, and environmental exposure interact over time to shape the internal terrain.Key topics include:Cancer prevention and disease progression through systemic imbalanceAutophagy and intermittent fasting as cellular cleanup and metabolic regulationCircadian rhythm and sleep (glymphatic system) in detoxification and repairChronic stress, vagal tone, and immune surveillanceInflammation, hormone signaling, and metabolic dysfunctionEnvironmental toxins and microplastics and their effect on cellular signalingAyurvedic diet, kitchen herbals, and personalized nutritionYoga, exercise, and movement in circulation and systemic integrationThe role of daily habits (Dinacharya) in long-term health and disease preventionThis episode reframes prevention as a continuous process of regulating the body’s internal environment, rather than a single intervention.Ayurveda and modern medicine are presented not as opposing systems, but as complementary perspectives describing the same biological reality—one focusing on treatment, the other on maintaining balance before disease emerges.Host: Shaughn JensonRegistered Advanced Ayurvedic PractitionerDirector, Ayurveda College of British ColumbiaGuest: Dr. Deepu Mirchandani, MD (Ret.)Former Medical Oncologist, BC Cancer KelownaClinical Researcher in Molecular PathobiologyDisclaimer:This podcast is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. If you have concerns about your health, please consult your licensed healthcare provider.

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    Episode 3: The Biological Terrain - Part 3: Immune Surveillance, Stress & the Tumor Microenvironment

    In Part 3 of this four-part series on The Biological Terrain, host Shaughn Jenson, Registered Advanced Ayurvedic Practitioner, continues the systems-based dialogue with Dr. Deepu Mirchandani to explore one of the most critical and least understood aspects of cancer biology:Immune surveillance and the tumor microenvironment.If cellular damage is a constant process in the human body, why do some abnormal cells get identified and removed… while others evade detection and progress?This episode examines how that question is answered not at a single point, but across an interconnected biological network — where immune signaling, metabolic state, stress physiology, and tissue environment converge.Drawing from modern oncology and classical Ayurvedic physiology, the discussion explores:How the immune system identifies and eliminates abnormal cells through surveillance mechanismsThe tumor micro-environment as an active, adaptive system — not just a mass of malignant cellsImmune misdirection, including the role of tumor-associated macrophages, regulatory T-cells, and suppressive signaling pathwaysChronic stress and the HPA axis as systemic disruptors of immune functionThe role of cortisol, cytokines, and inflammatory signaling in weakening immune recognitionThe gut–brain–immune axis and its influence on systemic regulationHow signaling pathways and cellular communication shape immune outcomesThe relationship between inflammation, metabolic dysregulation, and immune exhaustionFrom an Ayurvedic perspective, this layer of terrain reflects the integrity of Ojas (systemic resilience), the clarity of Tejas (discriminative intelligence), and the proper movement of Prana through the Srotas (channels of communication and circulation).When these regulatory principles are stable, immune surveillance remains precise and adaptive.When they are disturbed, the system does not simply fail — it can become misdirected, active but no longer interpreting signals correctly.This episode builds on the previous discussions of metabolic terrain and cellular fidelity, extending the model into immune regulation — where the body’s ability to distinguish self from non-self ultimately determines whether early cellular changes are resolved or allowed to persist.This is not a discussion about cancer treatment.It is a systems-level exploration of pre-clinical terrain — the biological conditions that shape risk long before disease becomes clinically visible.Produced in collaboration with the Ayurveda College of British Columbia

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    Episode 3: The Biological Terrain: — Part 2: Cellular Fidelity

    In Part 2 of this series, we move from the macro terrain into the cellular layer—where disease is ultimately decided.Host Shaughn Jenson, Registered Advanced Ayurvedic Practitioner, is joined again by Dr. Deepu Mirchandani, retired medical oncologist and molecular pathobiology specialist, where we explore the concept of cellular fidelity: the precision with which a cell maintains its identity, regulates its behavior, and determines its fate.This episode bridges modern molecular biology with Ayurvedic theory to examine how cells make critical decisions—whether to repair, continue, or undergo programmed removal.We discuss:- DNA replication and repair systems, including the role of topoisomerase and repair enzymes. - The p53 pathway as the “guardian of the genome” and its role in apoptosis. -The regulatory mechanisms of epigenetics—DNA methylation, histone modification, and chromatin remodeling.-The balance between survival and death signaling within the cell-How environmental factors influence gene expression and long-term disease development From an Ayurvedic perspective, these processes are understood through the framework of agni (transformative intelligence), tejas (discriminative clarity), and tamas (inertia or resistance to change).Health, at the cellular level, is not the absence of damage—it is the precision of repair, regulation, and removal.This episode offers a detailed synthesis of how both systems describe the same fundamental processes from different lenses.In Part 3, we will explore the next layer of protection: immune surveillance.Samya Ayurveda Podcast — exploring the intersection of traditional knowledge and modern science.Produced in collaboration with the Ayurveda College of British Columbia.Follow or subscribe to continue the series.

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    Episode 3 - The Biological Terrain: A Systems Dialogue on Cancer Prevention (Part 1 of 4)

    In this first installment of a four-part series, host Shaughn Jenson, Registered Advanced Ayurvedic Practitioner, is joined by Dr. Deepu Mirchandani (MD, Ret.), former medical oncologist at BC Cancer, for a systems-based conversation on cancer prevention.This episode explores the concept of the “biological terrain” — the internal environment that shapes whether disease can take root. Drawing from both Ayurvedic physiology and modern molecular oncology, the discussion examines:• The Seed-and-Soil hypothesis and host environment• Metabolism, insulin resistance, and inflammatory signaling• The gut–microbiome–immune axis• Signal transduction and cellular communication• The role of lifestyle in shaping long-term cancer risk• Where integrative support fits alongside conventional oncologyThis is not a discussion about cancer treatment. It is a prevention-focused dialogue examining how metabolic regulation, immune resilience, digestive integrity, and systemic balance influence health before pathology emerges.By mapping Ayurvedic concepts such as Agni, Ama, Ojas, and Prakriti alongside contemporary research in metabolism, endocrinology, and signal transduction pathways, this episode frames cancer risk as a network phenomenon — not a single-cause event.Part One establishes the macro terrain — metabolism, inflammation, insulin signaling, and the gut. In Part Two, the conversation moves inward to cellular fidelity, DNA repair, and the molecular decisions that determine whether damaged cells recover or transform.Produced in collaboration with the Ayurveda College of British Columbia.Follow or subscribe to continue the series.

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    The Ayurveda College of BC: Education, Standards, and the Future of Ayurveda in Canada

    What does it really mean to be a qualified Ayurvedic professional in Canada?In this episode of the Samya Ayurveda Podcast, we examine Ayurvedic education, professional standards, and scope of practice in British Columbia and across Canada.As Ayurveda grows in popularity, this conversation addresses why self-assessment fails in healthcare, how fragmented training pathways undermine public trust, and why standardized education is essential for safety, credibility, and professional recognition.Using real-world comparisons to regulated health professions—and a detailed look at Shirodhara—we explore how well-intentioned but inadequately trained practice can harm both clients and the integrity of Ayurveda itself.We also discuss the challenges faced by internationally trained BAMS graduates in Canada, the need for fair credential recognition, and the role of the Ayurveda College of British Columbia in building Canadian-aligned educational pathways.This episode is for students, practitioners, educators, spa owners, and anyone interested in the future of Ayurveda in Canada.

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    Introduction to the Ayurveda Association of British Columbia

    In our first episode, we introduce the Ayurveda Association of British Columbia (AABC) — its vision, mission, and efforts to preserve authentic Ayurvedic practice. See ayurvedaassociationbc.ca for more information.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The Samya Ayurveda Podcast explores the depth of Ayurveda as a complete system of medicine and its growing presence in Canada. Hosted by Shaughn Jenson of Samya Ayurveda Inc., each episode features Ayurvedic practitioners and members of the Ayurveda Association of British Columbia, discussing its clinical applications, specialties, and continued relevance in modern health.

HOSTED BY

Samya Ayurveda

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