The five niyamas (personal observances) provide ADHD individuals with a structured framework for building self-regulation without perfectionism or shame.
Niyama—the second limb of Patanjali's eightfold path, comprising five personal observances (saucha, santosha, tapas, svadhyaya, ishvara pranidhana)—offers ADHD individuals a practical ethics framework for self-regulation. Unlike external rules that trigger ADHD rebellion, niyamas are voluntary, internally motivated practices that align with values. Saucha (purity/cleanliness) supports ADHD organization without perfectionism; santosha (contentment) counteracts the ADHD pattern of never-enough striving; tapas (disciplined effort) provides structure for motivation; svadhyaya (self-study) enables ADHD self-understanding through reflection; pranidhana (surrender) fosters acceptance. The niyamas function as a coherent system rather than isolated rules. For ADHD minds prone to all-or-nothing thinking, this framework allows gradual, flexible implementation. One person might emphasize tapas and svadhyaya while another needs more santosha. The niyamas acknowledge that self-regulation is learned through repeated practice, not instant mastery. They provide internal anchors—values-based commitments—rather than external constraints. By adopting niyama practice, ADHD individuals ground their self-regulation efforts in philosophical meaning, transforming dry discipline into purposeful living aligned with what matters most.
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