The dual yogic principles of consistent effort and non-attachment that enable trauma survivors to retrain neural pathways without becoming trapped in perfectionism or avoidance.
Patanjali teaches that transformation requires both abhyasa (devoted, repeated practice) and vairagya (detachment from outcomes). For trauma survivors, this framework prevents two common pitfalls: abandoning healing work when progress feels slow, or obsessing over perfect recovery. Abhyasa recognizes that healing PTSD requires neuroplasticity—sustained repetition of new responses to triggers over months and years. Vairagya, meanwhile, liberates practitioners from toxic measuring and self-judgment that deepens trauma wounds. By practicing grounding techniques or breathwork with commitment yet without rigid attachment to results, survivors reduce the pressure that amplifies nervous system dysregulation. This balanced approach honors both the necessity of disciplined effort in trauma recovery and the wisdom of releasing control, creating sustainable healing momentum without retraumatization through perfectionist striving.
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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