Patanjali's ethical principles as the foundation for rebuilding internal and relational safety after trauma violation and betrayal.
Yama and niyama are yoga's ten ethical principles: non-harming (ahimsa), truthfulness (satya), non-stealing (asteya), energy management (brahmacharya), non-possessiveness (aparigraha), purity (saucha), contentment (santosha), discipline (tapas), self-study (svadhyaya), and surrender (ishvara pranidhana). These are not commandments imposed externally; they are principles that rebuild your internal integrity. C-PTSD often involves betrayal—of your body, your trust, your sense of safety. Yama-niyama practice restores ethical foundation. Ahimsa begins with stopping internal self-harm. Satya means honest self-reporting instead of dissociative denial. Asteya addresses the ways trauma teaches you to take back control through stealing, deception, or boundary violation. Brahmacharya redirects hyperactive sexual or aggressive energy. These principles are profoundly healing because they align your actions with your deepest values, rebuilding self-respect and trustworthiness with yourself. Yama-niyama create the ethical container necessary for safe healing.
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