Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Ahimsa as Gentle Self-Restoration

Non-harming as a foundational ethical principle prevents retraumatization and supports survivors in treating themselves with compassionate care during healing.

Patan
Why It Matters

Ahimsa, the first yama (ethical restraint), means non-violence toward all beings—including oneself. Trauma survivors often unconsciously perpetuate harm through self-criticism, pushing too hard in recovery, or engaging in destructive coping mechanisms. Patanjali's emphasis on ahimsa redirects this pattern explicitly. Gentle self-restoration becomes not indulgence but ethical practice. This means recognizing when a survivor's inner critic is harming them; it means pacing healing practices to avoid retraumatization; it means choosing responses that honor rather than punish the traumatized self. Ahimsa transforms recovery from a battleground where survivors fight their symptoms into a sanctuary where they practice kindness. This principle prevents the common trauma response of self-blame from calcifying into self-harm cycles. By making gentleness an ethical obligation rather than a luxury, survivors give themselves permission to heal slowly, to rest, to seek support. Ahimsa ensures that the healing process itself doesn't perpetuate the harm that trauma initiated, creating instead a foundation of safety and self-compassion.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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