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Concept
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Sthira Sukham Asanam: Steadiness and Ease in Routines

Patanjali's principle of balancing effort and ease, applicable to creating ADHD routines that are both structured and sustainable.

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Why It Matters

Sthira sukham asanam—often translated as steadiness and ease in the posture—encodes a fundamental principle in Patanjali's teaching: transformation requires both structure and gentleness. For ADHD, this balance is crucial. Rigid routines often fail because they ignore the need for ease and adaptation; overly flexible approaches collapse from lack of structure. Sthira sukham offers a middle path: create steady frameworks (sthira) while maintaining space for ease and responsiveness (sukham). An ADHD-friendly morning routine might have non-negotiable anchors—wake time, medication, movement—while allowing flexibility in sequence, intensity, or specific activities. This principle also applies to self-discipline: you need enough structure to channel attention but not so much that rigidity triggers rebellion or overwhelm. Patanjali teaches that sustainable practice requires this dance between commitment and compassion. For ADHD, sthira sukham means designing systems that hold you steady without crushing your spirit, that demand discipline without demanding perfection.

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