Patanjali's practice of self-study provides ADHD individuals with a compassionate framework for observing patterns, understanding triggers, and developing genuine self-knowledge.
Svadhyaya—self-study or self-inquiry—is one of yoga's niyamas and a radical act of compassion, especially for ADHD individuals often trapped in self-criticism loops. Svadhyaya means observing oneself without judgment, studying your patterns, triggers, and blind spots like a curious scientist rather than a harsh judge. For ADHD minds, this practice offers liberation from shame spirals by creating space between observer and observed. You notice: when does attention fragment? What internal and external conditions support focus? When does overwhelm arrive? What stories do you tell about yourself? This witnessing generates genuine self-knowledge where shame only created repetitive loops. Svadhyaya includes studying sacred texts and wisdom traditions—like Patanjali's own sutras—as mirrors for self-understanding. For ADHD individuals, combining personal observation with yogic philosophy creates a rich framework for understanding neurology, psychology, and spiritual nature simultaneously. This integrated self-knowledge becomes the foundation for all other practices and genuine transformation.
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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