The practice of santosha—contentment with what is—applied to accepting your attachment history and current relational reality without resistance.
Santosha, the second niyama, teaches contentment and acceptance of present circumstances without complaint or resistance. In attachment work, santosha addresses the painful resistance many bring to their attachment history: anger at how they were parented, shame about their patterns, or rejection of their current relational reality. This resistance actually perpetuates insecure attachment because fighting reality exhausts the energy needed for change. Santosha doesn't mean passive acceptance of harm or unhealthy dynamics; rather, it means clear-eyed acknowledgment of what is, from which genuine change becomes possible. Your attachment patterns developed intelligently in response to your early environment—they protected you when you needed protection. Santosha invites grateful acceptance of that protection while consciously choosing different patterns now. This principle also applies to current relationships: accepting your partner's limitations and your own, working with reality rather than demanding a fantasy version. Santosha creates the peaceful foundation from which secure attachment naturally emerges, replacing the exhausting resistance that insecure patterns require.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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