Patanjali's niyama (observances) as the foundation for building trust and commitment between your Self and all internal parts.
Niyama, Patanjali's second limb, consists of five personal observances: saucha (purity), santosha (contentment), tapas (discipline), svadhyaya (self-study), and ishvara-pranidhana (surrender to something greater). These practices form a covenant between you and your internal system. In Parts work, niyama becomes the commitment to treat yourself and your parts with consistent kindness, honesty, and respect. Saucha means creating internal and external conditions conducive to healing. Santosha means accepting where you are in the process without harsh judgment. Tapas means showing up to the difficult internal work even when it's uncomfortable. Svadhyaya means continuously learning about your internal system with curiosity rather than criticism. Ishvara-pranidhana means aligning your work with something larger than ego—perhaps wholeness, truth, or love. When parts experience that you are making this covenant with yourself, they relax their hypervigilance. They begin to trust that you will not abandon them, shame them, or use your developing awareness against them. Niyama creates the safe container within which genuine healing becomes possible.
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