Most of us wake to an alarm and a glowing screen, already slightly tired, and spend the day ricocheting between caffeine, emails, and late-night scrolling. We know we should sleep more, eat better, and breathe deeper, but advice often arrives in the form of strict rules and all-or-nothing challenges. Sattva Daily offers a different path: a sattvic lifestyle woven gently into the ordinary shape of your day. Drawing on Indian yogic traditions and the art of daily rituals india, Meera Qalani guides you through a simple rhythm of morning clarity, mindful meals, and evening quiet. You will learn how to design a healthy morning routine, understand basic dinacharya routine principles, create a soft evening screen detox, and turn your bedroom into a creating sleep sanctuary. Along the way, you will experiment with mindful eating ayurveda-style, explore ayurvedic self care practices like oil massage, and try a weekly "fast-light" day that favours ease over extremes. This book is for anyone who feels overstimulated yet oddly drained, curious about yoga for sleep and mood without needing to become a full-time yogi. It is especially suited to readers who long for steadier emotions and clearer energy but resist rigid wellness culture. With small, kind steps, Sattva Daily helps you build a life where a brief breath practice, a simpler plate, or a short gratitude journal practice can change the tone of an entire day.
Sattva Daily
SKU: 9789376555574
$22.99 Regular Price
$18.50Sale Price
- Meera Qalani is a writer and guide whose work explores how ancient Indian wisdom can soften the edges of modern life. Raised in a family where mornings began with oil lamps and quiet mantras, she grew up watching simple domestic rituals shape the mood of an entire household. Those early impressions left her fascinated by how small, repeated acts can bring calm to busy days. Over the years, Meera has shared practical, gentle approaches to yoga-inspired living with readers and students from many backgrounds. She is particularly interested in making ideas like dinacharya, sattvic eating, and mantra feel welcoming rather than rigid or exclusive. Her teaching style is grounded, humorous, and deeply respectful of individual circumstances. Meera often draws on images from Indian history and everyday culture, such as the unhurried pace of temple courtyards at dawn, to remind readers that slowness has always had a place in human life. In Sattva Daily, she brings together these threads of tradition and contemporary experience to help people create days that feel cleaner, lighter, and more deeply their own.


















