Patanjali's emphasis on asana (physical postures) as preparation for meditation becomes a clinical tool for releasing trauma stored in the body and rebuilding sense of safety in physical form.
While modern yoga emphasizes asana as its primary practice, Patanjali presents physical postures as foundational for deeper states—the body must be comfortable and stable for the mind to settle. For trauma survivors, this is clinically essential: trauma is stored in muscle tension, defensive posturing, and fragmented body awareness. PTSD creates characteristic somatic patterns: braced shoulders, shallow breathing, collapsed or overly rigid spine. Therapeutic asana practice, guided by trauma-informed understanding, systematically releases these patterns. Gentle, conscious movement in safe positions helps survivors reclaim their bodies as home rather than threat. Unlike aggressive yoga that can re-traumatize, trauma-sensitive practice emphasizes choice, consent, and interoceptive awareness. As survivors practice asana with mindful attention, they build the embodied sense of safety necessary for higher yogic practices. Patanjali's insight—that physical stability and ease are prerequisites for mental clarity—aligns perfectly with modern neuroscience showing that bottom-up (body-based) regulation must precede top-down (cognitive) healing.
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