Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Santosha: Contentment and Earned Secure Satisfaction

The yogic practice of contentment as peace with reality—enabling secure individuals to appreciate partnership without requiring perfect partners or constant reassurance.

Patan
Why It Matters

Santosha, one of the Niyamas in Patanjali's Eight Limbs, represents contentment with what is rather than constant striving for what should be. In attachment terms, this addresses the insecure pattern of perpetual dissatisfaction: anxious individuals demand constant reassurance; avoidant individuals find flaws justifying withdrawal; disorganized patterns oscillate between idealization and devaluation. Santosha does not mean settling for harm or dysfunction but rather releasing the defensive posture of "nothing is good enough." Secure attachment includes this quality: the ability to appreciate a partner's genuine care while accepting their inevitable imperfections and limitations. Santosha enables gratitude for reliable presence without needing to earn love through perfect performance or control. It releases the exhausting internal narrative critiquing oneself and others. This yogic practice trains the mind to find sufficiency rather than always seeking more, better, or different. For attachment healing, santosha becomes the antidote to the scarcity mindset underlying insecurity, allowing partnership to feel nourishing rather than a desperate necessity or a trap to escape.

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