The yogic practice of self-inquiry allows adults to examine personal attachment history, family patterns, and core wounds that shape current relationship behavior.
Svadhyaya, often translated as "self-study" or "inquiry," is Patanjali's prescription for deeper self-knowledge. Rather than intellectual analysis, svadhyaya represents honest, direct investigation into one's nature, patterns, and conditioning. In attachment work, svadhyaya becomes the courageous examination of personal attachment history: How did early relationships shape current patterns? What core beliefs about love and safety were installed? Where does pursuing, withdrawing, or controlling behavior originate? This self-inquiry differs from rumination; it's a compassionate witnessing of one's conditioning. Patanjali taught that svadhyaya naturally reduces suffering by creating understanding rather than blame. Adults practicing svadhyaya might discover that their anxious attachment mirrors a parent's desperate love, or that their avoidance replicates a caregiver's emotional distance. This understanding doesn't excuse patterns but illuminates them, enabling conscious choice rather than automatic reaction. By studying themselves with honesty and compassion, partners develop genuine self-knowledge that transforms attachment from blind repetition of family patterns into conscious, chosen secure relating.
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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