Three fingers on the wrist — one for vata, one for pitta, one for kapha. A doorway into nadi pariksha, the most subtle reading in Ayurveda. Not a diagnosis. A first listen.
Sit. Breathe normally. Don't take your pulse just after coffee, exercise, a meal, or a hot shower — the reading shifts. Early morning is the traditional time.
Women read on the left wrist, men on the right. Turn the wrist palm-up. With the opposite hand, place three fingers along the thumb-side — index nearest the wrist crease.
Press lightly. Soften the pressure until you feel each finger's beat distinctly. Notice the rhythm under each finger separately. Which one is loudest right now?
Each finger sits over a subtly different frequency — what the texts call vata, pitta, kapha. The one that feels most distinct is the dosha most active right now.
Real nadi pariksha takes a vaidya ten years to learn — the practiced hand reads not three pulses but seven layers under each. What you've just done is something smaller and beautiful: you've remembered that the body is communicating, all the time, and you can listen. Do this every morning for a week. Notice when the pulse changes. That noticing is the practice.
This reading is offered for personal reflection and learning, not as a medical diagnosis. Ayurvedic self-checks are a way of listening to your body — not a substitute for professional care. If a sign persists, worsens, or worries you, please consult a qualified healthcare professional. AnamayaPath does not provide medical advice or treatment.