The yogic principle of steady, long-term practice applied to building reliable self-nurturing habits that the inner child never received.
Abhyasa, the yogic principle of consistent, dedicated practice, becomes a reparenting tool when applied to self-nurturing. The inner child needs to experience that care is reliable, repeated, and non-negotiable—qualities often absent in original caregiving. Through abhyasa, the adult self establishes daily practices: gentle self-touch, affirming words, safe spaces, or nourishing rituals. Patanjali teaches that transformation requires sustained effort over time; reparenting mirrors this truth. Each repeated act of self-care proves to the inner child that it is worthy of consistent attention. Over weeks and months, abhyasa rewires the nervous system from scarcity to abundance. The inner child learns: I show up for myself, I am dependable, I matter. This disciplined, loving repetition heals the wound of parental inconsistency and builds secure internal attachment.
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