The ethical foundation for emotionally authentic communication that neither suppresses feelings nor causes harm.
Satya (truthfulness) and ahimsa (non-violence) are foundational yoga ethics that directly address emotional regulation's social dimension. Many struggle with the false choice between authentic emotional expression (which might harm others) and emotional suppression (which damages the self). Patanjali's framework transcends this dilemma: satya requires you to acknowledge your authentic emotional truth internally; ahimsa requires expressing that truth with wisdom and care. This isn't emotional dishonesty disguised as kindness; it's emotionally mature communication. For example, satya might acknowledge genuine anger while ahimsa shapes its expression toward understanding rather than blame. This concept directly addresses the emotional regulation challenge of authenticity without harm, especially in relationships where emotional honesty matters. By developing satya, you stop denying your emotions; by developing ahimsa, you stop weaponizing them. Together, these principles create emotionally resilient communication—you honor your emotional reality while honoring others' wellbeing, strengthening both personal integrity and relationship health.
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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