Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Aparigraha: Non-Grasping and Simplification

The principle of taking only what you need; directly addressing ADHD's tendency toward overcommitment, distraction, and mental clutter.

Patan
Why It Matters

Aparigraha means non-grasping—taking only what's necessary, releasing excess, and resisting the impulse to accumulate. For ADHD minds prone to saying yes to everything, starting ten projects, and collecting tools/apps/systems, aparigraha is medicine. Your difficulty isn't execution but discernment: you see possibility everywhere and grasp at all of it. Patanjali teaches aparigraha as both ethical principle and psychological liberation: when you let go of excess, you also release the mental burden of managing it. Applied to ADHD: choose three priorities instead of fifteen; keep one to-do app instead of five; commit to one hobby deeply rather than ten shallowly. This isn't deprivation but strategic simplification. ADHD brains have limited cognitive bandwidth; aparigraha redirects that precious resource toward depth rather than scattered breadth. The practice also addresses decision fatigue: fewer options means fewer decisions, which alleviates the paralysis many ADHD individuals experience. Aparigraha transforms your relationship to possibility: not rejecting opportunities but choosing ruthlessly, which paradoxically frees more attention and energy for what truly matters.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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