Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Niyama: Internal Ethical Alignment Across Parts

Niyama—the ethical observances toward oneself—provides a framework for aligning internal parts around shared values rather than competing agendas.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali teaches the niyama as five observances: purity, contentment, discipline, self-study, and surrender to the divine. While traditionally directed outward, these principles illuminate how parts can achieve internal harmony. In IFS work, when parts operate from different values—one prioritizing safety, another intimacy, another achievement—they create internal civil war. Niyama suggests that all parts can honor shared ethical ground. Self-study (svadhyaya) applied internally means each part can understand its own protective logic without shame. Contentment (santosha) means accepting the part's current limitation rather than fighting it. Purity (saucha) becomes the clarity of Self-leadership, unclouded by part reactivity. When IFS practitioners help clients ground their internal system in these observances, parts gradually align. They recognize they serve the same being, share the same core values, and can trust in a larger ethical intelligence. This transforms conflict into cooperation.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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