The Niyama of contentment that counteracts emotional reactivity driven by constant dissatisfaction, building resilience through intentional gratitude and acceptance.
Santosha, the second Niyama, cultivates contentment with present circumstances rather than constant striving toward imagined future states. Emotional dysregulation is often fueled by the stress between reality and desired states: anger at what is, anxiety about what might be, despair about what isn't. Santosha teaches that while working toward improvement, you simultaneously develop acceptance of current conditions. This doesn't mean passive resignation but rather eliminating the emotional suffering that comes from rejecting what is. Research on emotional regulation shows that acceptance-based approaches reduce rumination and anxiety more effectively than constant control attempts. Practicing Santosha means consciously recognizing what's working in your current situation, appreciating functioning systems, and releasing the toxic frustration of perpetual incompleteness. This creates emotional resilience by separating your well-being from constant goal achievement, allowing satisfaction to exist alongside striving. For emotional regulation, Santosha provides the inner stability that prevents normal disappointments from cascading into emotional crises.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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