Physical postures provide a body-based pathway to release trapped trauma while rebuilding safety and embodied presence.
Though Patanjali mentions asana briefly, yoga's physical practice profoundly addresses trauma stored somatically in the nervous system and musculature. Trauma freezes the body in protective patterns—chronic tension, collapsed posture, dissociation from physical sensation. Asana practice, approached mindfully, reverses this. Gentle, grounding poses (like child's pose or mountain pose) signal safety to the nervous system. Hip openers and gentle twists address areas where emotional trauma often lodges. Standing poses build embodied confidence and presence. Importantly, trauma-informed asana emphasizes choice and agency; survivors practice listening to their bodies rather than pushing through pain, reclaiming body autonomy. The practice creates an opportunity to befriend the body again, which trauma may have made feel unsafe or foreign. As survivors breathe in poses and notice physical sensations without judgment, they gradually integrate previously dissociated body awareness. This somatic reintegration complements psychological processing, allowing the entire being—mind, body, nervous system—to heal together toward wholeness and grounded presence.
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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