The principle of balancing effort with ease—avoiding both anxious hypervigilance and dissociative collapse.
Sthira-sukham—steadiness combined with ease—is Patanjali's instruction for how to hold the tension between stability and comfort. In anxiety, this balance is lost: either you're rigid and hypervigilant (sthira without sukham) or you collapse into avoidance and numbness (sukham without sthira). True resilience is both: steadfast presence without tension. When practicing with anxiety, sthira is the commitment to show up and face it; sukham is the release of unnecessary struggle. This principle applies throughout healing: in posture practice (strong but relaxed), in meditation (alert but not forcing), in daily life (engaged but not desperate). The anxious mind tends toward extremes. Sthira-sukham teaches the middle path: remain stable in your commitments and values without the tight grip that anxiety demands. This balance is not static but dynamic—continuously calibrating. By repeatedly practicing this equilibrium, you retrain your default response to anxiety: neither fighting it fiercely nor surrendering to it, but meeting it with both strength and gentleness. This is the wisdom of genuine mastery.
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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