The ethical precepts of yoga create a framework for authentic autistic relationships and community participation based on truth, non-harm, and honest self-knowledge.
The first two limbs of Patanjali's eight-fold path—yama (ethical restraints toward others) and niyama (ethical practices toward self)—establish a foundation of integrity before advancing in practice. Autistic individuals often struggle with social conformity pressures, masking, and the tension between authentic self-expression and social acceptance. The yamas (non-violence, truthfulness, non-theft, continence, non-possessiveness) provide an alternative ethical compass grounded in honest relating rather than social performance. Satya (truthfulness) becomes particularly powerful: autistic individuals are granted permission to communicate authentically about needs, limitations, and experiences rather than pretending neurotypical competence. The niyamas (purity, contentment, austerity, self-study, surrender) direct the autistic person toward self-knowledge rather than self-judgment. Svadhyaya (self-study) validates intense introspection and pattern-recognition regarding one's nature. This ethical framework creates psychological permission for autistic authenticity while maintaining responsibility toward others. Rather than masking to meet external standards, the yamas and niyamas offer a path to integrity that respects both neurodivergent truth and respectful community participation.
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