The five ethical practices (saucha, santosha, tapas, svadhyaya, ishvara pranidhana) that build internal stability and compassionate resilience during trauma recovery.
The niyama are Patanjali's personal observances complementing the yama (ethical restraints). These five practices—purity, contentment, discipline, self-study, and surrender—create an internal foundation essential for trauma recovery. Saucha (purity) involves cleansing the mind and body; for trauma survivors, this means gentle rituals that restore a sense of safety in embodiment. Santosha (contentment) teaches acceptance of present circumstances without judgment. Tapas (disciplined effort) builds capacity through intentional practice. Svadhyaya (self-study) encourages deep investigation of patterns and conditioning. Together, these niyama create a container of loving discipline—neither harsh self-judgment nor indulgence, but committed self-care. Trauma survivors often oscillate between self-punishment and avoidance; niyama offers a middle path of sustained, compassionate engagement with healing. The framework validates that recovery requires both structure and gentleness, personal accountability and self-forgiveness. Unlike punitive discipline, niyama-based practice recognizes that trauma has disrupted the survivor's internal stability, and this foundation must be deliberately and repeatedly rebuilt through conscious, compassionate choice.
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