Dear Doctor, Good morning! This email is about the Tongue Diagnosis webinars - free for a short while. Registrations are pouring in — and I couldn’tbe more excited.
What you’re stepping into is not just another course. This is a method forged over 10+ years of deep clinical work, shaped through conversations with over 15,000 patients, and refined across two decades into a complete, powerful system. It gives you something rare — the ability to see the marma of a disease. Thank you for being part of this.
Now, here’s the mission: Don’tkeep this to yourself. Tell your friends, your colleagues, your neutral contacts — even your competitors. Start “Tongue Circles.” Discuss. Share. Question. Explore. Master. And I’m right here with you — guiding, supporting, pushing you forward.
But here’s the real push: Bring in at least 10 people today. Let them know this clearly -- This is the last time I’m offering this Tongue Diagnosis program for free. Next time, it will be priced at ₹15,000+.
This is your moment to lead. Let’s make this movement unstoppable. A small poster is attached. When you post it, add the following link! vaidyagrama.com/t
Three Stories!
The First Story I was with a dozen of my Ayurveda students from Australia at Sukumaran Vaidyar’s residence-cum-clinic in an hour's journey from the city of Trivandrum. We were all seated on the veranda. Meida, a 42-year-old from Perth, was the first patient. He held her pulse for barely three seconds and said, “You have three stones—two in the right kidney and one in the left. The largest is 2.6 mm.” She immediately produced her test report and replied, “The largest one is only 2.4 mm.” He asked, “When was the scan done?” “Six months ago,” she said. He smiled gently and said, “It has grown.”
The Second Story I was in Aluva with Dr Raghavan. Another veranda, once again. A returning patient complained loudly, “Nothing has changed.” Dr Raghavan felt his pulse and said calmly, “I prescribed 28 days of medication, three times daily, without any break.” The patient insisted, “I followed it exactly as instructed.” Dr Raghavan checked his pulse again and asked, “Where were you on Monday, around midday?” The man hesitated. “Oh… yes… at a wedding.” “So, you missed a dose?” Dr Raghavan asked. The patient lowered his head. Dr Raghavan suggested he repeat the 28-day course—this time without any interruptions.
The Third Story I was in Canberra when I heard about an iridology workshop. I had a free day, and there was one place left. I paid the fee and secured my spot. At 9 a.m., to my astonishment, Alan Hudson walked onto the stage. He is a close friend of mine and the manager of Nature Care College in Sydney, but I had no idea he had been an iridologist for 40 years. “Rrramma!” he shouted in surprise, and we rushed towards each other and embraced. “Lovely to see you here,” he said. Alan began the session with a volunteer—a young woman, about 25 years old and weighing roughly 37 kilos. Her irises were projected onto a large screen. He studied them in silence. His shoulders dropped. His expression became still, calm, focused, almost meditative. For a few moments, he seemed entirely absorbed. Then he turned to her and asked, “When did you start working with large, heavy-set men?” She looked surprised. She had recently begun working at a brewery, where men weighing 90 to 130 kilos carried heavy barrels.
The First Story It is easy to read body, health, disease and emotions from pulse, tongue, etc. But how did they read it with that precision? How did they read life?
Please get your friends to register via vaidyagrama.com/t
why tongue?
Dear Doctor Ji,Good evening! I often begin a consultation with a simple question: “You need help with your health, right?” If the answer is yes, I say: “May I see your tongue? I might be able to find the cause.” That question has guided me for over two decades.
Let me share a moment that shaped everything. In the mid-1990s, while practising in North Coimbatore, a 34-year-old man walked in one Saturday morning. I looked at his tongue and asked, “How is your cholesterol?” He was surprised. Why would I ask that? Because I had seen the same tongue pattern in three previous patients, and all of them had elevated cholesterol. He paused… and said, “8.2.”
That moment changed my direction. From then on, I began learning directly from patients—one tongue at a time. Over the next 10 years: ~5,000 new patients ~20,000 consultations
Most of what I understand today about tongue diagnosis came not from textbooks, but from clinical observation and patient dialogue. Later, when I began teaching this to practitioners and students, something interesting happened: The more I shared, the clearer it became. Questions deepened. Patterns sharpened. Teaching and practice began feeding each other. That is the real joy of this work. So here is my invitation:
Don’t come alone. Bring: 10 of your colleagues and 10 young practitioners Because learning is juicier when you have friends to chat about it!
Let us observe, question, and learn—together. For now, this program is offered free. Register / Share: vaidyagrama.com/t
join us
Dear Friend, We invite your institution to be part of a focused training initiative on a simple, structured non-verbal diagnostic method in Ayurveda -Jihvā Pareeksha (Tongueology 2026). This is designed as one of the first easily learnable, non-verbal diagnostic tools with prescription protocol for Ayurveda students and practitioners—quick to grasp, practical in OP settings, and highly relevant where patient communication is limited. In just a few guided sessions, participants learn a clear system using visual markers (ten criteria including colour, coating, surface, margins), enabling:
Rapid assessment (30–60 seconds)
Non-invasive, universally applicable practice
Easy documentation and clinical correlation
We are opening a limited number of seats for institutions to participate in this pilot training (10 x 1.5-hour micro-modules with ongoing support for 12 months). Registrations vaidyagrama.com/t close soon, and participation will be confirmed on a first-come basis. If this aligns with your academic vision, we would be delighted to have your college join this initiative. I would be happy to share details, conduct the session (online/in person), and support implementation.