Ethical principles of honest self-assessment and non-violence that prevent physical and mental illness rooted in self-deception and self-harm patterns.
Satya (truthfulness) and ahimsa (non-violence) are foundational ethical principles in Patanjali's yoga that directly address the mental-physical intersection. Many people unconsciously harm themselves through self-deception—denying fatigue while pushing harder, rationalizing neglect, or maintaining harmful habits. This internal dishonesty creates cognitive dissonance that manifests as anxiety, depression, and psychosomatic symptoms. Satya requires honest appraisal: recognizing real limits, acknowledging emotions, admitting what needs to change. This honesty itself is therapeutic, reducing the stress of maintaining false narratives. Ahimsa means not harming oneself through excessive striving, perfectionism, or punitive practices. Many approach health obsessively, creating orthorexia or compulsive exercise—ultimately counterproductive. Together, satya and ahimsa create sustainable healing: honest assessment of where you actually are, combined with compassionate non-harming movement toward health. This prevents the cycle where people damage their bodies through willpower-based approaches that violate their true needs. These principles transform health practice from self-punishment to genuine self-care, creating the psychological safety and bodily respect necessary for integrated healing.
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