Truthfulness (satya) yama requires honest communication about needs and feelings, breaking the people-pleasing patterns that reinforce anxious attachment.
Satya, the second yama in Patanjali's ethical foundation, means truthfulness in word, thought, and action. For anxiously attached individuals, satya is transformative because insecure attachment typically involves communicating inauthentically—suppressing needs, performing acceptability, managing partners' emotions. This dishonesty, however protective it felt, perpetuates attachment insecurity because no one can love the false self you've constructed. Satya requires vulnerability: expressing actual needs, setting boundaries, acknowledging negative feelings toward loved ones. This terrifies anxiously attached people because truth-telling risked abandonment in original relationships. Yet paradoxically, satya enables genuine connection that anxious strategies never achieve. When you express authentic feelings and needs, partners respond to the real you; when they accept that reality, secure attachment develops. Avoidantly attached individuals also struggle with satya, using silence as control. Practicing satya means staying present in conversation, risking vulnerability, allowing others to matter. Integrated with yoga's meditative awareness, satya becomes increasingly possible as the nervous system learns safety through practice.
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