Svadhyaya, or self-study, is the yogic practice of observing oneself without judgment; applied to eating, it reveals the psychological roots beneath disordered behaviors.
Svadhyaya, the niyama of self-study, invites dispassionate observation of one's own patterns. In eating disorder work, this means becoming a curious witness to the relationship with food, body, and self. Rather than fighting symptoms or judging behaviors as good or bad, svadhyaya cultivates structured, gentle inquiry: What happens before a binge? What emotions precede restriction? How does the body speak when not overridden? What beliefs about worthiness live in eating choices? This Patanjali-inspired practice creates the psychological distance necessary for transformation. Unlike the rumination of eating disorder sufferers—which spirals into shame—svadhyaya is investigative without being critical. It examines thoughts, urges, and patterns as data, not moral failures. Through consistent self-study, individuals recognize when they are driven by fear, when by genuine hunger, when by internalized voices of others. This clarity is liberating. Svadhyaya transforms eating from an unconscious compulsion into a conscious, studied choice rooted in authentic self-knowledge.
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