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Concept
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Niyama: Self-Discipline and Internal Accountability

The five yogic observances (niyama) that cultivate inner integrity, offering a framework for how parts can commit to honest internal dialogue.

Patan
Why It Matters

Niyama encompasses five observances: purity, contentment, discipline, self-study, and surrender to something greater than the ego. These practices cultivate inner integrity and support psychological transformation. In parts work, niyama becomes the commitment internal parts make to honest relationship with Self and each other. Saucha (purity) means releasing defensive dishonesty—parts agreeing to reveal their true intentions and fears. Santosha (contentment) means parts accepting their role without resentment, trusting the Self's wisdom. Tapas (discipline) is the heat of commitment to change, the willingness of protective parts to try new responses. Svadhyaya (self-study) is the curiosity that fuels parts work—studying our patterns without judgment. Ishvara Pranidhana (surrender) is the ultimate trust: parts releasing their control to the Self's larger wisdom. When internal parts adopt niyama, they move from unconscious reactivity to conscious choice. The Self's role becomes establishing and modeling these observances, inviting parts into a culture of integrity, inquiry, and mutual support rather than coercion or shame.

Helpful guides
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