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Concept
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Antaranga Yoga: Inner Work and Parts Integration

Patanjali's concept of antaranga yoga (inner practice) emphasizes internal disciplines over external ritual, directly paralleling IFS's focus on internal dialogue and relationship over behavioral change alone.

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Why It Matters

Patanjali distinguishes between bahiranga (outer) and antaranga (inner) yoga, emphasizing that genuine transformation requires directing practice inward. Antaranga yoga focuses on the internal limbs—concentration, meditation, and absorption—rather than external postures or rituals. This distinction maps directly onto effective IFS work: behavioral change without internal parts work creates lasting conflict because the underlying protective system remains unchanged. You can force yourself to break a habit (bahiranga), but unless the parts driving that behavior feel heard and trust an alternative approach, the behavior returns under stress. Antaranga yoga in IFS means prioritizing genuine internal dialogue: listening to why parts adopted their protective strategies, acknowledging the fears they're managing, and allowing them to evolve from genuine understanding rather than willpower or external pressure. When you work at the internal level—building Self-leadership, healing wounds, releasing burdens—behavioral change follows naturally as an expression of the healthier internal system. Antaranga yoga reveals that lasting transformation always begins inside.

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