Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Sthira Sukham: Stability and Ease in Discomfort

Sthira sukham teaches holding both steadiness and ease simultaneously, essential for tolerating anxiety without collapsing.

Patan
Why It Matters

Sthira sukham—stability and ease, or strength and softness—is Patanjali's elegant principle for navigating psychological discomfort. In anxiety treatment, this teaches a both/and approach: remain steady and grounded (sthira) while allowing softness and gentleness (sukham) toward yourself. Most anxiety sufferers oscillate between two extremes: rigid white-knuckling through anxiety (sthira without sukham) or collapsing and avoiding (sukham without sthira). Sthira sukham integrates both qualities. When anxious, you remain present and committed to your values (sthira) while simultaneously releasing harsh self-judgment and allowing compassion (sukham). This principle directly opposes the common anxiety pattern of self-criticism during distress. Applied practically: sit with the anxiety firmly but gently; engage in exposure therapy with both courage and self-compassion; pursue recovery goals with determination and kindness. Modern trauma therapy and somatic approaches similarly teach that nervous system regulation requires balancing activation (sympathetic engagement) with settling (parasympathetic ease). For anxiety, sthira sukham provides a sophisticated framework: resilience is not hardness but the capacity to be both steady and yielding.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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