The yogic ethical precepts provide ADHD individuals with structured values and behavioral frameworks that support self-regulation at the deepest level, beyond willpower.
Yama and niyama—ethical observances and personal disciplines—form yoga's foundation in Patanjali's system, preceding physical postures. Yama includes non-harm, truthfulness, non-stealing, sexual responsibility, and non-possessiveness. Niyama encompasses purity, contentment, discipline, self-study, and surrender. For ADHD individuals, these precepts offer something crucial: value-based structure that operates beneath willpower. Rather than white-knuckling through rules, ethical alignment creates internal motivation. When an ADHD person commits to satya (truthfulness), they're less likely to create chaos through impulsive deception. Practicing aparigraha (non-grasping) addresses compulsive consumption. Saucha (purity/cleanliness) naturally creates supportive environments. These aren't restrictions but invitations toward freedom. By grounding life in personal values and ethical commitments, ADHD individuals build a reliable inner foundation that supports all other practices. This approach acknowledges that external structure alone fails; genuine change arises from values alignment. Yama and niyama ask: what kind of person do you want to be?
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