The yoga principle of combining steadiness and comfort in all endeavors, essential for sustainable psychological practice and preventing burnout in therapeutic work.
Patanjali's description of asana (pose) as sthira sukham—steady and comfortable, alert yet relaxed—offers profound guidance for holistic mental health. This principle extends beyond physical posture to psychological and relational stances. In therapy, both therapist and client must balance effort with ease; pushing too hard creates defensiveness and burnout, while too much comfort breeds stagnation. Sthira sukham teaches that genuine transformation requires neither white-knuckle forcing nor passive resignation but rather engaged relaxation. This applies to behavioral change practices: unsustainable, militant self-discipline creates rebound; conversely, self-compassion without challenge enables avoidance. The integration of sthira (stability, commitment, healthy discipline) and sukham (ease, gentleness, self-compassion) creates conditions where transformation becomes sustainable and embodied rather than exhausting and brittle. For practitioners, this principle prevents the common pitfall of burnout through overzealous helping. By maintaining sthira sukham in their own practice, therapists model balanced effort that clients can gradually internalize.
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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