The yogic principle of contentment with what is reduces the resistance and struggle that amplify anxiety symptoms.
Santosha—contentment or acceptance—is a foundational niyama (observance) in Patanjali's yoga, and it directly addresses anxiety's core mechanism: resistance. Anxiety intensifies when we struggle against fear, catastrophize about unwanted futures, or resist present discomfort. Santosha teaches the paradoxical truth that acceptance generates peace: by accepting that anxiety exists, that uncertainty is real, and that we cannot control outcomes, the emotional grip of anxiety loosens. This isn't resignation or passivity; it's the wisdom that what we accept becomes manageable, while what we resist persists. Patanjali understood that the mind creates suffering through its relationship to experience rather than the experience itself. For anxiety treatment, santosha offers a middle path between aggressive thought-stopping and anxious rumination: mindful acceptance. When a panic attack arises, rather than fighting it or believing catastrophic interpretations, santosha invites the practitioner to acknowledge 'this anxiety is present now' and allow it without adding resistance. This reduces anxiety's cycle while developing equanimity toward uncomfortable mental states.
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