Ishvara pranidhana (surrender to something greater) teaches releasing the illusion of solo control; embracing support systems, medication, and community is spiritual maturity with ADHD.
Ishvara pranidhana, often the final niyama in Patanjali's ethical teachings, means surrender—recognizing that individual effort alone cannot accomplish everything, and that yielding to forces larger than oneself is wisdom, not weakness. For ADHD, this directly challenges the cultural narrative that needing support is failure. Many delay seeking help, medication, or accommodations believing they should 'figure it out alone.' Patanjali teaches this attitude is actually ignorance masquerading as strength; true wisdom acknowledges interdependence. Ishvara pranidhana applied to ADHD means accepting medication without shame, asking for help organizing tasks, and recognizing that external structure (planners, reminders, accountability partners) isn't crutches but legitimate support. The yoga tradition models this: students work with teachers, yogis live in communities. ADHD thrives in isolation and shame; it flourishes when individuals surrender the myth of solo independence and embrace the reality of human interdependence. This surrender is psychological liberation, not defeat.
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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