The first ethical principle of living in accord with truth as prevention against the psychological fragmentation of self-deception.
Satya—truthfulness—is the second yama (ethical principle) in Patanjali's system, and prevention through satya means both external honesty and internal alignment. Many psychological crises arise from chronic self-deception: denying feelings, minimizing experiences, maintaining false narratives about relationships or capabilities, or hiding shame. This internal dishonesty creates psychological fragmentation—different parts of yourself holding contradictory beliefs. Over time, this generates anxiety, depression, inauthenticity, and relationship rupture. Prevention through satya means courageously meeting your own truth: acknowledging what you actually feel, admitting what you genuinely believe, recognizing your actual limitations and strengths. This isn't harsh self-judgment; it's compassionate clarity. When you live in alignment with your actual experience rather than a false story about it, integration increases and psychological stability grows. Satya prevents the crisis of discovering that your life is built on denial. It also allows authentic relationships—you can only truly connect with others when you're honest with yourself about who you are. This foundational practice prevents the fragmentation that later requires crisis intervention.
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