The practice of conscious physical postures that release stored trauma from the body, integrating Patanjali's attention to physical discipline with African healing's understanding of trauma embodiment.
While often reduced to flexibility exercises, asana in Patanjali's system represents disciplined embodied presence that creates conditions for deeper psychological work. Trauma from slavery, colonialism, and systemic violence becomes held in African bodies—through tension, disconnection, and restricted breathing patterns that perpetuate mental distress. Conscious asana practice, combined with African movement traditions, dance, and somatic rituals, releases this held trauma while restoring agency and presence in the body. Patanjali teaches that the body and mind are inseparable; by creating stability and comfort through intentional physical practice, practitioners access states of consciousness where healing becomes possible. This approach validates that African mental health recovery is inherently embodied, requiring movement, grounding practices, and reclamation of the body as a site of wholeness rather than pain.
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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