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Yama: Ethical Boundaries Across Internal Parts

Patanjali's yama—ethical restraints including non-harm and truthfulness—guide how parts interact internally and establish healthy, respectful boundaries within the system.

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Why It Matters

Yama comprises the five ethical restraints in Patanjali's yoga: ahimsa (non-harming), satya (truthfulness), asteya (non-stealing), brahmacharya (wise energy use), and aparigraha (non-grasping). These foundational ethics create the moral ground for all practice. In Internal Family Systems, yama becomes crucial for establishing healthy internal culture. Ahimsa means recognizing that all parts, even destructive ones, are attempting to protect you—no part deserves contempt or violence. Satya demands truthful acknowledgment of what parts are carrying rather than denial or rationalization. Asteya means not stealing resources from parts—respecting their time and needs rather than constantly overriding them with willpower. Brahmacharya addresses not exhausting parts through overwork or numbing behaviors. Aparigraha releases the grasping for parts to change before they're ready. By applying Patanjali's yama within your internal family system, you shift from adversarial toward respectful negotiation. Parts begin to cooperate when they're treated ethically, creating an internal democracy rather than tyranny of willpower.

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