Truthfulness (satya), the second yama, enables the honest self-disclosure that secure attachment requires, breaking cycles of protective inauthenticity.
Satya, truth-telling as ethical practice, extends beyond factual accuracy to authentic presence. In attachment, satya becomes the capacity to share genuine internal experience rather than performed versions designed to manage others' reactions. Anxious-preoccupied people often hyperbolize or catastrophize truth to secure reassurance; avoidant people minimize or intellectualize truth to maintain distance; both distort satya. The yoga ethical framework teaches satya as a compassionate practice—not brutal honesty but honest communication that honors both self and other. Applied to attachment: sharing authentic need ("I feel scared when you're distant") rather than accusation ("You always abandon me"), or expressing true boundaries ("I need alone time") rather than withdrawal. Patanjali teaches that satya naturally follows from other practices; as the mind stills and internal experience clarifies through meditation, truth becomes easier to articulate. Secure attachment research confirms: partners who can express genuine emotions—needs, fears, desires—build stronger bonds than those who perform safety or invulnerability. Satya dismantles the performative self required by insecure attachment, replacing it with authentic presence that invites genuine reciprocity.
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