Ishvara pranidhana, surrender to something greater, invites eating disorder sufferers to relinquish the illusion of total control and trust in recovery's unfolding.
Ishvara pranidhana—dedication to something greater than the individual ego—is the final niyama in Patanjali's framework. Eating disorders are fundamentally disorders of control: controlling intake, controlling body, controlling chaos through rigid rules. This false sense of control is seductive because it feels like power amid powerlessness, yet it ultimately enslaves. Ishvara pranidhana invites a radical shift: surrendering the fiction of control, acknowledging limitations, and trusting in a process larger than the ego's strategies. For practitioners, this might mean surrendering to recovery's process, trusting the body's intelligence, or opening to the mystery of healing. This is not passive resignation but active relinquishment of exhausting control efforts. The irony is profound: true freedom emerges when individuals stop trying to control everything and instead become vehicles for a deeper intelligence—whether understood spiritually, psychologically, or biologically. In recovery, ishvara pranidhana moves individuals from the contraction of control into the expansion of trust, from isolation into connection with forces and support beyond the imprisoned self.
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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