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Niyama: Ethical Principles and Values-Based Living

Patanjali's five personal observances that align behavior with values, directly supporting CBT's values clarification and commitment to valued living despite discomfort.

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Why It Matters

Niyama comprises five ethical principles: saucha (purity/clarity), santosha (contentment), tapas (disciplined effort), svadhyaya (self-study), and ishvara pranidhana (surrender/purpose). While traditionally spiritual, these describe psychological principles essential for values-based living central to modern CBT. A client with anxiety discovers values include family connection and creativity; therapy becomes implementing these values despite anxiety's protests. Santosha parallels acceptance and willingness to experience discomfort in service of meaning. Tapas reflects the discipline required for behavioral experiments and exposure work, maintaining effort through discomfort toward transformation. Svadhyaya mirrors metacognitive awareness—studying one's own patterns, beliefs, and reactions with honest curiosity. Ishvara pranidhana suggests aligning with something larger than symptom-relief—purpose, meaning, or contribution. Modern transdiagnostic CBT increasingly emphasizes that clients who achieve sustained recovery connect treatment to life purpose beyond symptom elimination. Patanjali understood that lasting change requires ethical alignment—not just thinking differently but living differently in ways aligned with deeply held values. Niyama provides a framework for this integration, transforming CBT from symptom-management into purposeful life reconstruction.

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