Patanjali's niyama—personal observances including purity, contentment, and self-study—provides ethical and practical disciplines that deepen and stabilize Parts work.
Niyama comprises the five personal observances in Patanjali's yoga: saucha (purity), santosha (contentment), tapas (disciplined effort), svadhyaya (self-study), and ishvara pranidhana (surrender). These internal disciplines cultivate the psychological and spiritual soil where transformation takes root. In Parts work, niyama becomes the commitment to honest self-examination (svadhyaya), maintaining internal cleanliness by releasing victim narratives and blame (saucha), and practicing contentment with the pace of healing (santosha). Tapas—the heat of transformation—relates to the sometimes-difficult process of facing parts you'd rather avoid. Ishvara pranidhana suggests surrendering to a larger healing intelligence beyond the ego's agenda. By adopting niyama in your Parts work practice, you create container and integrity around the process. You stop using IFS as self-indulgent rumination and instead engage the serious disciplines required for genuine transformation. Patanjali's niyama elevates Parts work from casual psychological insight to a path of mature spiritual development and accountability.
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