Satya (Truthfulness)
Satya: Truthfulness
This second yama, Satya, is truthfulness of speech, thoughts, intentions and actions. Truthfulness (Satya) has a deeper mean than simply not telling lies. It means that our attitude to others is marked with sincerity, integrity and authenticity, to use a term loved by existentialists.
There is also the deeper dimension expressed in the saying: “Truth is Love, Love is Truth.”
Practice: Honesty, owning feelings, loving communication, assertiveness, giving constructive feedback, forgiveness, non-judging, and letting go of masks.
Brutal honesty as a weapon is not Satya
Honesty can be used as a weapon, so be careful to be COMPASSIONATE. It is not about being “right.” Love is higher than truth. “Brutal Honesty” is not truth. If LOVE directs how you use truth then you are practicing Satya. Ahimsa (non-violence) must be practiced with Satya.
Concepts and notions keep us from the truth, keep it murky. Learn to be accepting like a newborn baby. Don’t let Ego get in the way of Heart.
Telling the Truth: Satya
Few things feel more like betrayal than a lie.
Like Ahimsa, this second yama, Satya, has many layers. A lie feels just as much as a betrayal as all other forms of violence. Pantajali guides us toward Satya in various ways. The first and most obvious is to tell the truth as best we can. This may not be as easy as it sounds.
Truth on a material level is always relative truth
Researchers have found that eyewitnesses to an event are notoriously unreliable. Amazingly, the more adamant the witnesses are, the more inaccurate they tend to be. Even this simple example shows that truth can be relative; we cannot really prove what happened five minutes ago. To speak the truth is to speak from a point of view.
Even trained scientists, whose job requires them to be completely objective and who study the most straightforward of events in nature, disagree on what they see and the interpretation of their results.
So what does telling the truth, practicing the first level of satya,mean? It means that when given a choice (life is about choices) speak with the intention of being truthful. From this perspective, “truth” is filtered through our experience and beliefs about the world, but when we speak with the intention of speaking from truth, we have a better chance of not harming others.
Satya with Ahimsa:
A wise teacher once stated that nothing could be true if it was harmful to others. In other words, unless we speak first from ahimsa we are not practicing Satya.



