In every age, the health of a people has served as the silent measure of a nation’s strength, its happiness, and its ability to prosper. A society bent beneath the weight of illness may build industries and dream of technological marvels, but it shall never falter in spirit. Today, amid the clang of the digital age, amidst all its conveniences and illusions of abundance, a quiet despair lies—a growing malaise seated not in the soul but in the stomach, not in the mind but in our unyielding routines. The remedy, though, need not be sought in laboratories or legislatures alone. Rather, it may be found in the modest turning of the clock’s hand—a national return to the rhythm of the sun.
It is a truth as old as civilisation itself that nature dictates the order of life. The ancient seers of India—keen observers of the body, the mind, and the stars—left behind not just hymns to divinity but instructions for living. In Ayurveda, the science of life, one finds the delicate balance of the dinacharya—the daily routine—a symphony of habits designed to align man with the cosmos. And among these, perhaps none is more potent than the practice of taking the last meal before sunset.
“It is said,” notes the tradition, “that he who dines before twilight shall not befriend disease.”
Modern science has only recently begun to catch up with this ancient dictum. Studies now abound linking late-night meals with obesity, hypertension, diabetes, and disorders of the thyroid. But what our modern empiricism struggles to calculate is what the ancient sages knew intuitively—that the body is not a machine, indifferent to the hour, but a living temple whose sanctity is preserved by harmony with the sun.
The principle of Mitahara, or moderate eating, emphasises not only what we eat but also when we eat. The Hatha Yoga Pradipika, a seminal text in the yogic tradition, prescribes:
“Ardhaṁ caturthaṁ jalasya ca”
(Fill half the stomach with food, one-quarter with water, and leave the remaining quarter empty.)
— Hatha Yoga Pradipika 1.58
This is not merely a culinary directive—it is a philosophical axiom, an invitation to live in restraint and rhythm. The moment one defies these natural patterns, the body begins to rebel. And the rebellion takes the form of disease.
If the objective of life is to abide in one’s truest form, to live not in discord but in harmony, then surely our daily actions must reflect the eternal rhythm of the universe. We are not separate from the order of the sun and moon, but their intimate reflection. The decline in public health is not the failure of medicine; it is the consequence of forgetting this alignment.
And yet, in the cities and suburbs of present-day India, the twilight hour finds most of us not at the table but at work. Commuting home at 9:30 p.m., dining close to midnight, and collapsing into rest in the earliest hours of the following day—this has become the unwholesome pattern of millions. The cost is not merely fatigue. It is a toll extracted from our organs, our children, and ultimately, the soul of society itself.
How, then, do we reconcile modern obligations with ancient wisdom? We cannot merely admonish individuals to rise early and dine before dusk when structural compulsions dictate otherwise. A society-wide change demands not guilt but governance.
Let us then propose, with the quiet confidence of reason, that the working hours of the nation be shifted. Let the day begin at 8 a.m. and conclude at 4 p.m.—a modest adjustment with monumental consequences. It is a small revolution, yet one that would tilt the axis of the Indian lifestyle back toward health, sanity, and strength.
Consider the possibilities:
- Families return home while there is still light in the sky.
- Children see their parents at dinner rather than only at breakfast.
- Meals prepared and consumed in peace, not in haste.
- Time to walk after dinner, to speak, to think, to simply be.
Such a change would not only improve digestion but disposition, for it is no exaggeration to say that many of our modern afflictions—depression, anxiety, insomnia—are but symptoms of an existence lived out of rhythm.
The repercussions of our misaligned routines extend beyond physical health. Mental well-being is inextricably linked to our daily habits. Chronic fatigue, anxiety, and depression often stem from irregular sleep, poor nutrition, and lack of restorative time with family. A well-rested mind fosters clarity, creativity, and resilience.
The Bhagavad Gita elucidates the path to balance:
“युक्ताहारविहारस्य युक्तचेष्टस्य कर्मसु।
युक्तस्वप्नावबोधस्य योगो भवति दुःखहा॥”
Yuktāhāra-vihārasya yukta-ceṣṭasya karmasu
Yukta-svapnāvabodhasya yogo bhavati duḥkha-hā
(He who is regulated in his habits of eating, sleeping, recreation and work can mitigate all material pains by practising a yoga system.)
— Bhagavad Gita 6.17
Here is the very crux of healing—not through medication, but through rhythm, repetition, and rest. A nation that eats on time, rests on time, and rises with the sun is a nation that shall rise in all ways—economically, spiritually, and intellectually.
The benefits ripple outward. Fewer hospital visits mean that our overburdened healthcare infrastructure breathes easier. A smaller national medical bill means that households are left with savings—savings that may be invested in education, leisure, or entrepreneurship. Happiness in the home translates to civility in the public square. A reduction in family strife, broken homes, and quiet desperation may all follow from this single pivot.
Is this idealistic? Yes. But it is not impractical. This vision has its foundation not in fantasy but in both empirical truth and ancestral wisdom. The argument here is not a rejection of modernity but a refinement of it. There is wisdom in blending the ancient and the contemporary—taking the truth of Ayurveda and applying it to the calendar of a bureaucrat.
If our government offices, courts, and schools began their days at 8 a.m., the ripple effect would be profound. Private industry would follow suit. Transportation systems would reorient. Cities would breathe again.
A society that wakes with the sun eats before dusk, and sleeps with the moon is a society that remembers it is human. And in remembering that, it reclaims its strength.
For what is public health but the sum of private habits? What is national prosperity but the fruit of well-lived days?
Let us not pretend this is a small thing. The discipline of rising early has guided civilisations. From Vedic Brahmins to Spartan soldiers, from the monks of Nalanda to the Roman Senate, the wisdom of the morning hour is universal.
The sun, after all, is impartial. It offers its blessings to all who align with its rhythm. And if the great machinery of the Indian state—the ministries, courts, schools, and offices—can be persuaded to adjust by a mere hour or two, the reward may be nothing short of a renaissance.
Let us imagine an India where each citizen has time for breakfast, for dinner, and for conversation, where mealtime becomes not a task but a ritual. Where illness declines and, with it, despair. Where mornings are not battles against the clock but greetings to the dawn.
The morning hour is not just a time of day—it is a way of life. It is a return to truth. To nature. To health.
Let us choose the origin. Let us not wait for the destruction.
Let the sun rise not only upon our homes but upon a new India—one where the clock, the calendar, and the conscience once again move in harmony.
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