Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Ahimsa Applied to Self: Non-Violence in Eating

Ahimsa, the yogic principle of non-harming, reframes eating disorder behaviors as violence against oneself and cultivates compassionate nourishment.

Patan
Why It Matters

Ahimsa—non-violence or non-harming—is the first yama in Patanjali's ethical foundation. Eating disorders represent profound ahimsa violations: restriction starves the body, bingeing assaults it with shame, purging destroys tissues, and compulsive exercise exhausts vital energy. The individual inflicts systematic violence while remaining unconscious of the harm. Yoga's ethical framework makes this visible: every restriction, every compensatory behavior, every self-critical thought during eating is an act of violence masquerading as control or virtue. True recovery requires recognizing eating disorder behaviors as fundamentally incompatible with ahimsa. This shifts the moral ground—rather than restriction being disciplined and compassion being weak, the reverse becomes clear. Nourishing the body becomes a spiritual practice of non-harm. Eating becomes an ethical act. This reframing transforms eating from a battleground of control into an expression of reverence for life itself, both external and internal.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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The Examined Path Through Eating disorders — all presentations
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