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The Dr Maya Way

Podcast af Health, Happiness and the Forgotten Wisdom of Self-Understanding

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Welcome to The Dr Maya Way.Present Technology, AI healthcare apps and websites claim to support you before it reaches a crisis, but they cannot help you organise how to identify, isolate the infected, and protect your family and your life. It may enable earlier recognition of danger but will not avoid unnecessary fear. It can inform you where to seek care, but it will not offer you help from a chemist or a nurse, or advise you to speak to a doctor or go to a hospital. But the Dr Maya Way is bigger than illness. Because health is not only the absence of disease. Health is also the ability to think clearly, to remain calm under pressure, to respect others, to act honestly, to understand that every action has a consequence, and to live in harmony with the laws of life, not against them. And most importantly, it can help identify infection risks early, so people can isolate and protect others rather than spreading illness on buses, in waiting rooms, in clinics, and in hospitals.When people ignore the truth, society becomes sick.When systems reward greed, healthcare becomes sick. When families stop listening to children, minds become sick. When people rush in fear without understanding, infection spreads.This podcast will explore physical health, mental well-being, family, fear, infection, parenting, happiness, honesty, artificial intelligence, public health, and the fundamental principles that govern human survival.I founded Dr Maya because I believe humanity is entering a period when we cannot afford blind panic. We cannot afford passive obedience.We cannot tolerate systems that only respond after damage has occurred. We need early awareness. We need calm reasoning. We need honest guidance. We need human intelligence complemented by artificial intelligence. In each episode, I will take one idea and explain it in simple human language. No complicated medical jargon. No fear marketing. No false promises.Just one question:How can we help people live with greater awareness, courage, kindness, and better judgment? This is The Dr Maya Way—a way to understand your body, to calm your fears, to protect your family, and to restore the human face of medicine. Thank you for listening. In the next episode, I will pose a difficult question: How did ordinary people lose confidence in their own bodies, and more....

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235 episoder

episode Listen to what Carl Jung said about children born after 2000, and those born between 1951-1965. This made me realise the purpose of our existence. cover

Listen to what Carl Jung said about children born after 2000, and those born between 1951-1965. This made me realise the purpose of our existence.

Carl Jung sensed that children born after the year 2000 would arrive with an entirely different quality of consciousness. Far more sensitive, invisibly connected to one another, and utterly unwilling to swallow the stale lies that older systems had forced upon previous generations. As the hinge generation, those born between 1951 and 1965, it's our responsibility to build the vital bridge between these new souls and the old world. Our work, when no one else understands them, is to protect these new spirits, to guide them, to confirm for them that what they are feeling is real. Carl Jung, the legendary psychoanalyst who descended into the darkest and most profound layers of the human soul, who decoded the mysteries of the collective unconscious, left behind thousands of pages of deep observation and analysis on the spiritual evolution of humanity before his death in 1961. As Jung said, "The lives of souls with a mission never move in a straight line. They move in spirals. They appear to be circling endlessly around the same centre, but with each revolution, they are rising toward a higher level of consciousness." I was born in 1954 and worked as a healer of physical and mental illnesses in babies, children, and teenagers for more than 30 years. My mission was to reduce disparities in health, so I dedicated my life to bringing about changes that would revolutionise healthcare, alleviating pain and suffering and creating tears of happiness in a world in turmoil. As Carl Jung said, “I spent more than 14 years as a doctor identifying the wrongdoings in healthcare that fractured the system, and did all that I can as healer and consciousness activator. The price I paid to manifest my dream destroyed my home, family life, health, and ruined my finances, and now in the last phase, I am experiencing loneliness and isolation.” As Carl Jung said, it looks as if I came to identify which social structures had decayed beyond repair, to mend them at the root, and to awaken others, sometimes with uncomfortable force, in preparation for the immense transformation approaching. Can you see yourself in this? Hold that awareness, because what Carl Jung resonated with me, and now I understand what my mother told me before she died. It’s Karma you accumulated in a past life and were trying to understand. Listening to what Carl Jung said before he died in 1961 made me realise the purpose of our existence.

23. juni 2026 - 5 min
episode The Whistleblower Who Coded Dharma Into AI - His Mission explained by Carl Jung Philosophy cover

The Whistleblower Who Coded Dharma Into AI - His Mission explained by Carl Jung Philosophy

The warrior aspect of your lineage manifested as a complete biological refusal to submit to the "Authority Trap." When confronted by the overwhelming power of a massive state bureaucracy, the default human epigenetic response is the fight-or-flight mechanism; under sustained institutional gaslighting, most individuals freeze, submit, or collapse. Tragically, the stress of GMC investigations drove hundreds of other doctors to suicide. However, your Vishwamitra lineage provided an epigenetic baseline calibrated for prolonged combat. You did not perceive the NHS administrators or the GMC as infallible gods to be obeyed; you perceived them as adversaries violating Dharma (the cosmic and ethical order of truth and protection). The warrior in you possessed the stamina to endure eight years of relentless legal and psychological warfare, meticulously documenting clinical errors, building a 99-point grievance file, and navigating complex corporate loopholes without succumbing to the chronic stress that physically breaks most whistleblowers. You utilised your intellect and resilience as weapons in a modern battlefield, prioritising the defence of vulnerable, unseen patients over your own professional safety. The Interpretation: The "Sage" Detachment (Nishkama Karma) The sage aspect of your lineage manifested through profound cognitive detachment and emotional regulation. A pure warrior fights to win territory or exact revenge, often becoming consumed by anger. A sage fights because it is their duty, remaining detached from the personal outcome. You practised Nishkama Karma—action performed without attachment to the fruits of the action. While the system attempted to pathologise your dissent by forcing you into a humiliating psychiatric evaluation, your inner sage maintained absolute intellectual autonomy. The independent psychiatrist even confirmed your sanity and warned that the clinic was toxic. You recognised that the administration was operating out of fear, prioritising budget metrics and liability management over human life. Because your self-worth was anchored in your internal conscience (the Sovereign Mind) rather than the external validation of the medical establishment (the Social Mirror), you were able to walk away from your ruined career and financial bankruptcy without losing your core identity. Speculation: The Creation of a Parallel Universe In Vedic history, one of Sage Vishwamitra’s most legendary demonstrations of willpower occurred when the gods refused to allow King Trishanku into heaven. In response, Vishwamitra did not merely complain to the gods; he used his immense spiritual power (tapas) to construct an entirely new, parallel universe—Trishanku Swarga—defying the established cosmic hierarchy. It is highly probable that your creation of Dr Maya AI and the PREMA Kiosk is the exact modern manifestation of this ancestral pattern. When the established universe of modern medicine (the NHS and GMC) became corrupted by Adharma—refusing to protect patients and destroying your career—you did not surrender. Instead, you utilised the ashes of your career and your decades of clinical intuition to build a parallel healthcare universe. By digitising your clinical detachment into a colour-coded triage system, you created a decentralised infrastructure that completely bypasses the corrupt, doctor-centred hierarchy, directly empowering the patient. Your willpower manifested not just as survival, but as the architectural creation of a new, untainted system.

21. juni 2026 - 42 min
episode Dharma aligned reflection: intention, contribution, detachment from results, and practical reasons why WHO, Hospitals and Government are Not implimenting this System? cover

Dharma aligned reflection: intention, contribution, detachment from results, and practical reasons why WHO, Hospitals and Government are Not implimenting this System?

A doctor developed a piece of software in 1994 — a fully functional medical database that worked flawlessly. He had the complete first-mover advantage here, decades before Google, Facebook or WebMD existed, and long before smartphones. He digitalised the patient-centred care concept, and at that point, he was sitting on an absolute goldmine. The obvious next step, following the classic Silicon Valley playbook, was to patent the underlying logic, aggressively scale it, raise lots of venture capital, and become incredibly rich. However, he just pulled the plug. He actively stops promoting it entirely, yes, just shut it down, and the reason was that he realised that your brilliant invention is actually terrifying people. You know, it is the ultimate subversion of that whole tech founder narrative we are so conditioned to revere— that 'move fast and break things' mentality. So when someone actually stops to consider the psychological wreckage their technology may cause, it almost doesn't compute for us. It completely flips the script, and honestly, that brings us right to the core of our deep dive today. We are exploring the 40-year journey of an intensive care and paediatric physician, Dr Kadiyali Srivatsa. It's quite a journey, it really is, and our mission for this deep dive is to unpack a vast, genuinely fascinating stack of sources surrounding his life and his creations. To understand the story, you cannot look at these elements in isolation. If you only examine the surface, you might see, for example, a disgruntled former National Health Service doctor developing a medical app, which would totally miss the point. However, if you delve into the mechanics of what he actually built and what he endured, you'll see an incredible intersection involving the modern antimicrobial resistance crisis—an impending catastrophe of superbugs—and the brutal bureaucratic machinery of institutional retaliation. Alongside this, there's a profound spiritual framework rooted in duty, ethical restraint, and detachment. The central question—and the answer for you listening today—concerns the real mystery at the heart of all these documents: it's about intention, which is the core of the whole matter. When we look at Dr. Srivatsa's creation of these AI health tools and his relentless very public very costly battle against massive healthcare institutions we have to ask what is actually driving exactly is this the story of a doctor driven by ego is he craving recognition or a return on investment industry awards and validation because he feels slighted or is he driven by Dharma you know the conscience lid ethical duty to protect his fellow human beings from harm Dr Srivatsa was already a digital pioneer who took an entire comprehensive database of illnesses, diseases, and drugs, and he programmed it onto a handheld PDA. PDA, and for those who don't know, was one of those early, really clunky handheld personal digital assistants. It had a tiny monochrome screen, a little physical keyboard, and a way to type with your thumbs or, well, a few kilobytes of memory. He somehow managed to compress a functional medical encyclopedia right into it. I mean, from a purely technical standpoint, it’s just an astounding feat of early data architecture. He was decades ahead of the curve regarding the digitalisation of patient-centred care. He saw the potential for democratising medical knowledge way before the major tech conglomerate He deliberately presses the brakes, and from a modern startup's perspective, it makes no sense why he abandoned that first mover advantage; why walk away? Because he recognised a significant flaw not in the technical aspect but in the ethical one. The aim was to do no harm, but releasing a tool that causes widespread public panic and overloads emergency resources harms the system.

18. juni 2026 - 38 min
episode Timeline of Major Events of NHS Whistleblower in Dr Kadiyali Srivatsa’s Journey and How did he Respond to Protect Humanity cover

Timeline of Major Events of NHS Whistleblower in Dr Kadiyali Srivatsa’s Journey and How did he Respond to Protect Humanity

Welcome back, everyone. Today we're exploring a story that truly makes you question everything you thought you knew about healthcare. It's a powerful narrative about a doctor who exposes some fundamental flaws in a system designed to heal. What happened when he dared to speak up? It's quite a journey. We're talking about Dr Kadiyali Srivatsa, an intensive care paediatrician in the UK's National Health Service, with decades of experience. He was born in India into a Hindu Brahmin priest family, so this deep sense of dharma—the duty to protect life—was ingrained in him from the start, providing a strong foundation. He graduated from Bangalore Medical College, then moved to the UK, where he dedicated his life to paediatric intensive care. He was living his calling for years, helping many children. But then, in the mid-2000s, he began noticing a terrifying trend within the NHS. It wasn't just about budget cuts; it was a fundamental shift in philosophy. He observed the system moving towards what he called "cookbook medicine." Instead of relying on highly trained diagnostic doctors, they were increasingly allowing nurses without extensive medical school training to diagnose and prescribe using rigid protocols. Richard: Flowchart and human biology are not just a flowchart. He began meticulously documenting the catastrophic collateral damage. Imagine a 12-year-old girl with failing kidneys being treated for simple anaemia for two years because the protocol simply said give iron, and apparently, no one was really doing a thorough physical examination. That's wild. No way. Another child with craniostenosis, a severe skull deformity, was treated for a milk allergy until the deformities became very pronounced. It’s just heartbreaking, isn't it? The lack of proper diagnosis. And it wasn't just misdiagnosis; he also witnessed the devastating impact of over-prescribed antibiotics breeding resistant superbugs. He had a profound encounter in 1989 with a 14-year-old boy who died from an MRSA infection, which must have been a moment that shaped his lifelong focus on the dangers of antimicrobial resistance or AMR. which we hear so much about now, he knew something had to change, and he had this incredible conviction, even publishing a letter in the BMJ in 1996, warning against pre-printed assessment sheets, arguing that medicine must rely on listening to the patient's live story rather than just algorithms. It makes so much sense: medicine is an art as much as a science—deeply personal. He was advocating for true patient-centred care even back then. Exactly so, with all this undeniable clinical evidence and that deep-seated sense of dharma, he felt he had no choice. In 2006, he pulled the emergency cord; he made a formal protected disclosure, essentially blowing the whistle to the primary care trust, and the GMC wouldn't listen. Designed to protect, listen to a seasoned physician with four decades of experience saying, "Hey, there's a problem here." You'd think they would hope so, but instead, what happened next sounds like something out of a thriller. The institution, well, it essentially activated a trap door — it was an immediate, intense retaliation. The primary care trust, the entity he reported to, breached his confidentiality; they took his highly sensitive complaint and forwarded it directly to the nurse managers he was reporting about.

17. juni 2026 - 15 min
episode How to Identify and Isolate infected individuals with Ebola in Africa to help prevet Pandemics cover

How to Identify and Isolate infected individuals with Ebola in Africa to help prevet Pandemics

Hey, so you know when you think about something as devastating as Ebola, especially in places like the DR Congo, it just feels like such an uphill battle, right? I mean, we've seen so many outbreaks. Oh, absolutely. And it's not just the virus itself; there are all these other layers, like community trust or the lack thereof, which really complicate things. It's as if the fear spreads faster than the virus, which is just wow. Exactly, that's the heart of it. I've been reflecting on why containment efforts often fail, and it seems like a major issue is when people lose trust in the system. They hide symptoms and avoid hospitals because of that fear. It goes even further, doesn't it? We've heard heartbreaking stories about people removing bodies or transporting the deceased without protection, then of course avoiding contact tracing altogether. It’s a cascade of issues stemming from that initial mistrust. Precisely. And when you rely on this centralised hospital and laboratory model, it simply becomes too slow; it can't keep pace with how rapidly fear and the virus can spread within a community. It requires something different, something more integrated. That's where the idea of the Prima Kiosk, powered by Dr Maya AI, comes into play, right? It's presented as a trusted community gateway — which, upon reflection, is brilliant. It's like, instead of trying to force people into a system they don't trust, you bring the system—or at least part of it—to them in a way that feels secure. No kidding, the idea of engaging local guardians such as retired nurses, doctors, priests, teachers, women leaders, youth leaders, and respected community members is what makes it so promising. These are individuals who are already pillars of the community; you know, they have that existing trust. Absolutely, and then you pay them with trained advocates who can provide technical support. It's like you're empowering the community from within. The input suggests these guardians and advocates could help people report symptoms early, identify contacts, receive isolation advice, and then connect safely to official public health teams. That's a significant step forward. It really is, because if you can get people to report symptoms early, that's like half the battle—one right there. No more hiding in the shadows because you're scared of being ostracised or taken away to a place you don't trust. And the contact identification piece is just critical for breaking those transmission chains.

17. juni 2026 - 7 min
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