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Yama and Niyama: Ethical Foundation for Trauma-Informed Self-Relationship

Patanjali's foundational ethical principles provide trauma survivors with a healing framework emphasizing non-harm, truthfulness, and self-discipline in rebuilding a trustworthy relationship with oneself.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali's yoga begins not with postures or meditation but with yama (ethical restraints toward others: non-violence, truthfulness, non-stealing, non-excess, non-possessiveness) and niyama (observances toward self: purity, contentment, discipline, self-study, surrender). This ethical foundation is clinically profound for trauma survivors. Many experienced betrayal of these principles—harm, lies, theft of autonomy. Others unconsciously reenact perpetrator patterns. Yama and niyama create a recovery framework where healing is ethical recovery. Ahimsa (non-violence) begins with ceasing self-harm, negative self-talk, and shame-based punishment. Satya (truthfulness) means honest acknowledgment of what happened without minimizing or catastrophizing. Brahmacharya (non-excess) supports moderation in numbing behaviors. Niyama adds svadhyaya (self-study) through journaling and honest reflection, and Ishvara pranidhana (surrender) that permits release of control need. This ethical architecture prevents survivors from healing through spiritual bypassing or creating new trauma patterns. It establishes genuine integrity as the foundation for transformation, honoring both the violation experienced and the possibility of genuine wholeness.

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Mental Health
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