The complementary practices of persistent effort and non-attachment that enable trauma survivors to rebuild resilience without spiritual bypassing or re-traumatization.
Patanjali teaches that steadiness in yoga arises from abhyasa (dedicated, consistent practice) and vairagya (non-clinging detachment). For C-PTSD, this dual framework prevents two common pitfalls: burnout from forced healing and spiritual avoidance that delays integration. Abhyasa means showing up daily to therapeutic work, body awareness, and meditation despite resistance—building neuroplasticity through repetition. Vairagya means releasing attachment to outcomes, timelines, and the fantasy of a "perfect" recovery, which paradoxically accelerates healing. Together, they create sustainable transformation: the trauma survivor practices with commitment yet without perfectionism, works with symptoms without identifying as their trauma, and engages effort without ego-driven force. This balance prevents the collapse of the nervous system under pressure and the dissociation that arises from spiritual bypassing, allowing genuine psychological maturation and somatic healing.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.