The yama (ethical practice) of truthfulness applied to self-knowledge: seeing ADHD patterns clearly without the distortion of shame or denial.
Satya, truthfulness, extends beyond speech to self-perception. Many with ADHD oscillate between denial ('I'm fine, just creative') and harsh self-criticism ('I'm broken'). Satya teaches a third way: honest, clear-eyed observation without judgment. You see: I have difficulty sustaining attention on unstimulating tasks. I interrupt others. I start projects and leave them incomplete. These are observations, not verdicts. Patanjali's ethical foundation in satya means building integrity with yourself first. This honest baseline is necessary for effective treatment—you cannot address what you refuse to see or what you distort through shame. Satya also means speaking truth to others about your needs and limitations, reducing the isolation many ADHD individuals experience. For ADHD, satya becomes the foundation of self-compassion: seeing clearly and responding with wisdom rather than judgment.
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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