The yogic commitment to truth-telling and accurate self-perception that directly counters personality disorder distortions and rationalizations.
Satya, truthfulness, extends beyond honest speech to encompassing truthful perception of oneself and one's patterns. Personality disorders typically involve sophisticated self-deception: the grandiose person genuinely experiences superiority despite contrary evidence; the dependent person unconsciously distorts autonomy as dangerous; the avoidant person frames isolation as preference rather than fear. Satya practice requires gradually developing the psychological courage to perceive oneself and one's patterns accurately—painful as this often is. This means noticing when one is rationalizing harm, constructing false narratives about relationships, or misperceiving one's impact on others. Patanjali teaches that truthfulness is not only ethical but psychologically essential for transformation. As one commits to increasingly accurate self-perception despite discomfort, the rationalizations that maintain personality patterns become harder to sustain. Satya creates the foundation where genuine insight and change can occur because one is working with reality rather than with the false narratives that personality disorders use to perpetuate themselves.
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