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Concept
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Abhyasa: The Practice of Steady Return to Center

Patanjali's principle of consistent, disciplined practice applied to the ongoing work of stabilizing Self-leadership and returning to internal balance.

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Why It Matters

Abhyasa, one of the two pillars of Patanjali's path (Yoga Sutras 1.12), means deliberate, sustained effort to return consciousness to its center. This is not harsh forcing but gentle, persistent redirection—exactly what parts work requires. When internal parts are activated, triggered, or polarized, abhyasa is the steady practice of returning awareness to the Self, the witnessing consciousness that can hold all parts with compassion. In IFS terms, this is the cultivation of Self-leadership through repeated micro-practices: pausing to notice activation, breathing, asking an anxious part if you can help, stepping back into observation. Patanjali teaches that abhyasa must be practiced for a long time, without interruption, with sincere dedication (1.14). For parts work, this means building a sustainable contemplative rhythm that normalizes internal dialogue and Self-presence as daily reality rather than occasional achievement.

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