Patanjali's yama (ethical restraints) applied as principles for compassionate, non-violent relationship with all internal parts.
Yama, the first limb of Patanjali's yoga, comprises five ethical principles: ahimsa (non-violence), satya (truthfulness), asteya (non-stealing), brahmacharya (wise use of energy), and aparigraha (non-grasping). These principles form a foundation for ethical relationship with your internal parts. Ahimsa means committing to non-violence toward yourself and your parts—stopping the harsh internal criticism and judgment that wounds parts further. Instead of treating protective parts as enemies to defeat, you extend compassion. Satya means being honest with yourself about what your parts truly need rather than what you think they should want. Asteya means not stealing from parts by dismissing their experiences or invalidating their protective intentions. Brahmacharya means using your energy wisely in internal work rather than wasting it through reactive conflict with parts. Aparigraha means releasing the need to control or force parts to change. When you operate from yama, you create an internal environment of safety where parts feel respected and valued. This ethical foundation transforms Parts work from a technique into a spiritual practice of self-acceptance and compassionate transformation.
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