Cultivating satisfaction with your relational reality, releasing fantasies that prevent genuine secure connection.
Santosha, contentment, is the second Niyama—internal discipline—in Patanjali's path. Many attachment struggles root in discontent: anxious attachment chases idealized merger; avoidant attachment resists intimacy believing something better awaits; secure attachment requires santosha—genuine satisfaction with your actual partner and relationship. This doesn't mean accepting harm or settling for incompatibility, but releasing the desperate wish that your partner be different. Santosha teaches that secure attachment grows through appreciating what genuinely exists rather than yearning for fantasy versions of your partner or relationship. The Yoga Sutras suggest that contentment creates stability; discontent creates constant grasping. Applied to attachment, santosha means releasing resentment that your partner doesn't read your mind, acknowledging their genuine efforts, finding richness in actual intimacy. This practice transforms attachment from desperate seeking into genuine appreciation. Paradoxically, santosha—contentment with reality—deepens secure attachment because partners feel genuinely valued rather than constantly judged against impossible standards, creating cycles of authentic warmth rather than exhausting pursuit.
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