Sama Ayurveda

Sama Ayurveda Sama Ayurveda offers Ayurvedic and natural health consultations.

Charlene Porter, ND, MH, Board certified AHC, Ayurvedic Wellness Practioner is an Ayurvedic health professional who is dedicated to helping you achieve your health goals, naturally. With over 25 years in the medical field, I focus on achieving health by helping the body obtain balance and heal itself, naturally. I employ ancient Ayurvedic principles to restore the body's balance so that it can focus on healing itself.

06/16/2026

If you've been holding it together a long time, this is one of the simplest places to set some of it down.

Shirodhara is the closest Ayurveda has to a nervous system reset. An hour of warm oil over the forehead, in a quiet room, with nothing asked of you.

This luxurious treatment is best for the body that needs a deep exhale. Experience this treatment by messaging us to schedule.

If you’ve tried the HIIT workouts, the extra 2 p.m. caffeine, and every quick fix for feeling tired but wired, it’s time...
06/12/2026

If you’ve tried the HIIT workouts, the extra 2 p.m. caffeine, and every quick fix for feeling tired but wired, it’s time to get back to the basics.

The Ayurvedic approach to feeling burned out is to find specifically what your body is depleted in to naturally restore balance through simple lifestyle routines.

Not sure what your body needs? That’s what I specialize in, and I’ve helped hundreds of clients minimize their imbalances and heal their body, mind, and spirit.

Reach out to schedule your complimentary consultation today.

06/11/2026

Has your body felt like it’s holding stress and tension?

Abhyanga is the Ayurvedic practice of applying warm herbalized oil to the body. The warmth and specific hand movements help the oil absorb deeply, delivering herbs into the tissues without first passing through the liver. This results in better circulation, deeper relaxation, softer skin, stronger immunity, and improved digestion and sleep.

Treat yourself to this luxurious service by reaching out to schedule!

If you've felt more tired, restless, or off lately, your body could be responding to the shift from spring into summer.A...
06/09/2026

If you've felt more tired, restless, or off lately, your body could be responding to the shift from spring into summer.

As the weather swings between seasons, old imbalances can resurface: lighter sleep, skin flaring, a shorter temper.

You don’t have to manage these imbalances alone. Message me to schedule a complimentary consultation to see if we're a good fit to work together.

This is beautiful. Variety is truly the spice of life in all that we do. Eating the same foods day in and day out, doing...
05/29/2026

This is beautiful. Variety is truly the spice of life in all that we do. Eating the same foods day in and day out, doing the same exercise day in and day out, it leads to stagnation in baby, mind, and soul. So get up, get out, and try new things always! Keep your mind, body and soul active.

Overlooked exercise habit could add years to your life, 30-year Harvard study finds

by: Stephanie Woods | April 30, 2026

https://www.naturalhealth365.com/overlooked-exercise-habit-could-add-years-to-your-life-30-year-harvard-study-finds.html

Unedited [comments]

"Most people think about exercise in terms of volume – step counts, minutes logged, and how many sessions they fit into a week. For decades, public health messaging has focused almost entirely on doing more.

"But a major Harvard study tracking over 111,000 people for 30 years has found that what type of movement you do – and how much you mix it up – may matter even more than how long you exercise.

"Researchers from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health published their findings in the peer-reviewed journal BMJ Medicine. They analyzed data from two large, long-running cohort studies across more than three decades. And the results challenge one of the most deeply embedded assumptions in mainstream fitness culture.

"Doing more of the same is not enough, researchers find.

"Participants who engaged in the greatest variety of physical activities had a 19% lower risk of premature death than those with the least variety – even when total exercise time remained exactly the same.

"Furthermore, the benefits extended well beyond general mortality. People with the most diverse movement habits saw their risk of dying from heart disease drop by up to 36%, cancer by 13%, and respiratory illness by as much as 41%.

"Importantly, the researchers controlled for total activity volume throughout the analysis. In other words, the reduction in death risk came from variety itself – not simply from exercising more.

"Two people doing the same total minutes of movement per week produced very different health outcomes depending on whether they stuck to one activity or rotated through several. That finding directly challenges the widespread assumption that exercise is purely a numbers game.

"Why your body needs different kinds of movement:

The research team draws on data from the Nurses' Health Study and the Health Professionals Follow-Up Study — two of the most rigorous and long-running nutrition and lifestyle research programs in the world. Together, they tracked 111,000 adult men and women through regular surveys on exercise habits, health history, and lifestyle factors every two years for over 30 years.

"The activities participants reported ranged widely – walking, gardening, running, swimming, cycling, weightlifting, yoga, tennis, and stair climbing.

< "Researchers found that people who spread their movement across multiple activity types consistently outlived those who focused on just one or two, regardless of intensity." >

"Lead researcher Dr. Frank Hu of Harvard noted that variety likely allows people to benefit from multiple dimensions of fitness simultaneously – cardiovascular endurance, muscular strength, flexibility, and balance – in ways that any single activity cannot provide alone.

"What Western medicine still gets wrong about exercise:

"Western medicine has long treated exercise as a single category – you either do enough or you don't. Guidelines focus almost entirely on weekly minutes of moderate activity, with occasional mentions of strength training. But this research suggests that framing misses something fundamental about how the human body responds to movement.

"The body adapts to repeated stress over time. Doing the same workout consistently yields diminishing returns as the body becomes more efficient at that specific movement pattern.

"Moreover, different activities challenge different physiological systems. Aerobic exercise trains the cardiovascular and respiratory systems. Resistance training builds muscle mass and supports metabolic health. Balance and flexibility training protect joints and reduce the risk of injury.

"And activities like gardening or walking in nature combine gentle movement, stress reduction, and time outdoors – factors that independently support immune function, hormonal balance, and longevity.

"Natural solutions for building a more diverse movement practice:

"Treat movement variety as a health strategy, not just entertainment. Research suggests that deliberately rotating through different activity types produces longevity benefits that no single exercise, no matter how consistently performed, can fully replicate.

"Aim to include at least three to four distinct movement types each week. Combining aerobic activity, resistance training, and a flexibility or balance practice covers the foundational dimensions of physical fitness that this study links to reduced mortality risk.

< "Add movement your body was designed for but rarely gets." >

"Modern life has narrowed the range of physical challenges most bodies face. Research consistently shows that activities involving varied terrain, natural environments, and functional movement patterns – gardening, hiking, swimming, or carrying loads – engage muscles and coordination systems that gym-based exercise alone rarely reaches.

"Additionally, these activities tend to support stress reduction and mental well-being, contributing independently to longevity.

"Support recovery and cellular health between sessions.

"Exercise variety only produces its full benefits when the body can repair and adapt between sessions.

> "Research suggests that magnesium supports muscle recovery and sleep quality – both of which directly affect how effectively the body responds to training. [Nourishing herbal infusions are all excellent sources of magnesium. One ounce/30 grams of nettle, red clover, or oatstraw each contain 55-65mg: 15% of daily need. Yogurt, seeds, and nuts are other great sources.]

> "Organic anti-inflammatory foods, including wild-caught fatty fish, organic berries, and extra virgin olive oil, reduce the oxidative stress that physical exertion generates. [And, of course, nourishing herbal infusions are anti-inflammatory, especially linden and comfrey leaf.]

"Together, these two strategies allow the body to fully absorb the longevity benefits of varied movement.

"The fitness conversation that is 30 years overdue:

"A dataset of 111,000 people tracked over three decades provides some of the strongest evidence in exercise science.

And what it shows is clear: variety in movement is a measurable driver of how long and how well people live.

Yet most exercise advice – from physicians, trainers, and public health guidelines – still focuses almost entirely on minutes per week rather than the quality and diversity of movement."

My active week includes walking/jogging 4-5 miles a day — outside when possible, two hour-plus yoga sessions a week, tai chi and Qi gong most days, one or two HIITS sessions a week, running after goats as needed, and gardening daily, which includes hauling buckets of compost as well as lugging pots, stones, and plants, raking, and stretching.

I add exercise value whenever, wherever I can.

I meditate while walking.

I curl and stretch my toes when sitting.

I sweep instead of vacuuming.

I'm barefoot most of the time.

I drink a quart of nourishing herbal daily.

I plan to live another 25 years.

And old age requires strength, balance, flexibility, and resilience.

Yesterday, a young man, in his early twenties, remarked:

"You don't move like an eighty-year-old, like my grandma."

To which I replied,

"When I was your age, I decided I wanted to be like this when I was old.

And I've been moving every day since that decision.

It's easier to keep yourself lively than it is to regain it.

Nonetheless, with the help of herbs, with nourishing herbal infusions, I did regain my liveliness, despite a month in bed recovering from massive surgery."

If, however, you haven't been moving every day,

It isn't too late.

Any movement — several different ones! — yields benefit.

Get up. (If you can't, stretch.)

Get out. (If you can't, look out the window as you move.)

Be embodied.

It is in beauty.

It is a giveaway dance of breath.

Thank you plants.

I feel my heart beating as one with the heartbeat of the earth.

I am surrounded by green blessings.

Gratitude

Joy

05/28/2026

For most people, the first kitchari is a surprise. It's plainer than they expect, and somehow more satisfying. By day three, they don't want anything else. By day five, the body is clearer than it's been in a long time.

The quiet magic of the dish is that it does its work without asking for attention.

If you've been curious about Panchakarma, kitchari is part of why it works. It’s simple nutrition while the body’s natural intelligence mobilizes and releases what has built up.
Book a complimentary consultation through the link in bio when you're ready to learn more about our deeply restorative Panchakarma treatment.

There's a question that comes up a lot in my consultation room: "When will I feel like myself again?"The answer depends ...
05/26/2026

There's a question that comes up a lot in my consultation room: "When will I feel like myself again?"

The answer depends on so many factors. The path back is almost always small rituals implemented consistently, layered over time.

I help guide my clients to restore what the body has been slowly losing in the busyness of everyday life: a sense of rhythm and the right elements to bring you back to balance. From that rhythm, energy, vitality, and radiance begin to return.

If you're curious about which rituals would serve your body in this particular season of your life, I'd love to chat with you. Reach out to schedule your complimentary consultation today!

If you’re looking for deeply supportive ways to help your body into summer, here are some of my nourishment recommendati...
05/21/2026

If you’re looking for deeply supportive ways to help your body into summer, here are some of my nourishment recommendations.

As an Ayurveda Practitioner, I take the time to get to know each client’s history, symptoms, and lifestyle. Through a series of supportive therapies and herbs, we find exactly what is needed to help the body tap into its natural intelligence to return to a state of balance and reduce symptoms.

Interested in what this could look like for you? You’re in the right place. Sama Ayurveda is currently accepting new clients, and we can’t wait to meet you.

05/19/2026

In Ayurveda, this kind of rest is called Panchakarma. It's the tradition's deepest cleansing therapy: layered bodywork, herbal preparations, nourishing meals, therapeutic oils, and the kind of stillness modern life doesn't make easy on its own.

Many come to Panchakarma after feeling foggy, exhausted, or simply not like themselves. The treatments work with the body's natural intelligence, helping it release what's built up so balance can return.

At Sama, we offer Panchakarma in the lineage tradition. Slowly, personally, and at your own pace.

If you're wondering whether Panchakarma might be the next chapter for you, I'd love to meet you. Book a complimentary consultation through the link in bio, and we'll talk about where your body is and what it might be ready for next.

These four symptoms are chapters of the same story and if they feel like the reality you live in every day, you're not i...
05/14/2026

These four symptoms are chapters of the same story and if they feel like the reality you live in every day, you're not imagining it. There's a way through, and you don't have to walk it alone.

At Sama Ayurveda, we focus on body work, herbs, targeted therapies, nourishing foods, and rest. We believe that slow, layered, deeply personal care is the key to guiding your body’s natural intelligence to return to a balanced state.

If you've been waiting to feel like yourself again, we’re ready to help you begin that journey.

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Cuyahoga Falls, OH
44223

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 7pm
Tuesday 4pm - 7pm
Wednesday 4pm - 7pm
Thursday 10am - 7pm
Friday 10am - 7pm
Saturday 10am - 4pm

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