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Yama-Niyama: Ethical Foundation for Recovery

Patanjali's ethical precepts provide psychological scaffolding for addiction recovery by rebuilding integrity, self-respect, and moral coherence.

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Why It Matters

Patanjali begins the Yoga Sutras not with meditation but with yama (ethical restraints toward others) and niyama (observances toward self). This sequence is psychologically astute: addiction typically involves violation of these ethics—harm to self and others, dishonesty, theft, loss of self-discipline. Recovery requires rebuilding moral identity. The niyamas particularly support this: saucha (purity and cleansing), santosha (contentment with what is), tapas (disciplined effort), svadhyaya (self-study), and ishvara-pranidhana (alignment with something transcendent). These practices directly counter addiction's psychological erosion: they restore self-respect through ethical action, interrupt shame spirals through self-compassion practices, build willpower through intentional discipline, develop self-awareness through honest reflection, and reconnect individuals with meaning beyond substance use. Patanjali's wisdom suggests that recovery isn't primarily about willpower against craving but about reconstructing ethical selfhood and psychological integrity through deliberate practice.

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Mental Health
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