Five ethical principles that create interpersonal harmony and prevent emotionally harmful behavior patterns.
Yama, the first limb of Patanjali's eight-fold path, comprises five ethical principles: Ahimsa (non-harm), Satya (truthfulness), Asteya (non-stealing), Brahmacharya (wise use of energy), and Aparigraha (non-grasping). These principles directly address emotional regulation in relationships and within oneself. Ahimsa prevents the emotional destruction caused by harsh self-judgment and aggressive communication; practicing it naturally regulates emotional reactivity toward self and others. Satya prevents the emotional accumulation from living inauthentically—the suppressed emotions that explode later. Brahmacharya prevents the emotional depletion from over-giving or boundary violation. Yama recognizes that emotional dysregulation is often relational: shame from judgment, resentment from dishonesty, exhaustion from energy theft. By establishing ethical ground through Yama, practitioners naturally create conditions where emotional stability flourishes. This framework shows that you cannot separate emotional regulation from how you treat yourself and others. As you practice Yama, emotional regulation becomes easier because you're not constantly managing guilt, shame, and resentment from unethical patterns.
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