The practice of sustained, conscious presence with discomfort (duhkha) rather than using substances to escape, rebuilding emotional resilience.
Addiction fundamentally represents a dysfunction in discomfort-tolerance. The addict's nervous system has been conditioned to interpret ordinary discomfort—boredom, anxiety, sadness, restlessness—as intolerable emergencies requiring immediate pharmacological intervention. Patanjali's yoga offers an alternative: asana and meditation become formal training in remaining present with difficult sensations without reactivity. The Sanskrit term duhkha (suffering, discomfort) becomes not something to frantically escape but something to study and sit with consciously. This isn't masochistic; it's developing the capacity to distinguish between minor discomfort and genuine emergency, to observe pain without fusing identity with it, to let uncomfortable emotions peak and naturally subside without external intervention. Traditional meditation seated postures (asana) become literal training: sitting in increasingly challenging positions, maintaining steady breath and attention while experiencing physical discomfort. This translates directly to psychological discomfort. The nervous system learns: 'Discomfort exists, attention remains steady, the body survives, discomfort eventually passes.' This fundamental retraining of the discomfort-response architecture addresses addiction's core mechanism—the compulsive escape reflex—replacing it with conscious capacity.
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