Patanjali's five restraints as invitations to examine how wounded relationships and internalized harm manifest as mental distress.
The yamas—non-harm, truthfulness, non-stealing, sexual restraint, and non-grasping—are often taught as moral rules. Yet Patanjali's deeper intent is relational: these restraints reveal where consciousness is fragmented or defensive. In African healing, mental distress frequently originates in fractured relationships: betrayal, exploitation, sexual harm, theft of dignity, or coercive control. The yamas function as diagnostic mirrors. When someone cannot practice ahimsa (non-harm), they may carry intergenerational trauma expressing itself through aggression. When truthfulness fails, shame and secret-keeping create psychological burden. By examining each yama, healers and patients uncover relational wounds and begin repair. This is shadow work: bringing unconscious relational patterns into awareness. African healing traditions have long understood that individual psychology cannot be separated from relationship ecology. Patanjali's yamas provide a framework for mapping relational injury and designing healing that restores right relationship with self, others, ancestors, and community.
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