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Yama and Niyama as Ethical Foundation for Safety

Patanjali's ethical precepts create an internal framework of integrity and self-care that stabilizes the chaotic self-relationship common in C-PTSD.

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Why It Matters

The first two limbs of yoga—yama (ethical restraints toward others) and niyama (ethical observances toward self)—establish a foundation of dharma (right living) essential for complex trauma recovery. C-PTSD survivors often have fractured self-trust due to violation, betrayal, and dissociation; they may oscillate between self-harm and compulsive control. Patanjali's yamas (ahimsa/non-harm, satya/truthfulness, asteya/non-stealing, brahmacharya/wise energy use, aparigraha/non-grasping) and niyamas (saucha/purity, santosha/contentment, tapas/disciplined effort, svadhyaya/self-study, ishvara pranidhana/surrender to something greater) create a coherent ethical framework for relating to oneself and others. Practicing these is not moralism but cultivation of a stable internal environment. When a survivor commits to ahimsa (non-harm) toward themselves, satya (truthfulness in acknowledging needs), and santosha (acceptance of current capacity), they begin rebuilding trust in themselves as beings worthy of ethical care. This foundation makes all subsequent healing practices more stable and integrated.

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