The balance of steadiness and ease in relationships, creating secure attachment through regulated presence.
Sthira sukha—stable yet comfortable—is Patanjali's principle for sustainable practice and presence. Sthira is firmness, steadiness, and commitment; sukha is ease, comfort, and joy. Applied to attachment, secure relationships embody both: reliable consistency without rigidity, genuine intimacy without suffocating closeness. Anxious attachment often sacrifices sthira (stability) for sukha (approval); avoidant attachment maintains sthira (independence) while losing sukha (warmth). The Yoga Sutras suggest that mastery emerges at the intersection of these polarities. Secure attachment similarly requires both elements: steady emotional availability and easy spaciousness, commitment without control, trust without naivety. This framework helps you assess your relationships—are they steady but joyless, or joyful but chaotic? Sthira sukha guides you toward genuine security where both you and your partner feel simultaneously grounded and free, committed and individuated, creating relational resilience.
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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