The paired disciplines of consistent practice and detachment from results create sustainable ADHD management without the burnout cycle of perfectionism.
Patanjali teaches that yoga steadiness comes from two complementary forces: abhyasa (dedicated, repeated practice) and vairagya (non-attachment to results). This dyad directly addresses ADHD's common trap: intense effort followed by discouragement when results aren't immediate or linear. Abhyasa means showing up daily to your practice—taking medication consistently, using organizational tools, practicing focus techniques—regardless of outcome variation. Vairagya means releasing attachment to "perfect focus" or "finally being normal," which paradoxically increases stress and dopamine-seeking behavior. Together, they create resilience. You commit to the process (your responsibility) while accepting that results fluctuate based on sleep, stress, and neurochemistry (beyond total control). This liberates ADHD individuals from the shame cycle where one distracted day seems to invalidate all progress. Patanjali's framework permits self-compassion alongside accountability, making sustainable ADHD management possible without the perfectionism that often leads to relapse and avoidance.
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