Patanjali's principle of abhyasa (consistent, dedicated practice) addresses trauma's demand for repetitive rewiring and long-term nervous system recalibration.
Abhyasa, meaning persistent effort and practice, is central to Patanjali's path toward mental mastery. Trauma recovery requires exactly this—repeated, intentional rewiring of neural pathways conditioned by fear and danger. Unlike single therapeutic sessions, abhyasa emphasizes daily practice that gradually rebuilds safety responses in the nervous system. For PTSD sufferers, this translates to consistent meditation, breathwork, grounding exercises, and somatic practices that over months literally reshape how the brain processes threat. Patanjali understood that mental transformation demands dedication and repetition. Modern neuroscience confirms this: neuroplasticity requires sustained effort to create new pathways. Abhyasa provides both philosophical justification and practical structure for the long commitment trauma recovery demands, preventing the hopelessness that arises when people expect instant healing.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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