Atman is the eternal, unchanging true self; recognizing this dissolves identification with traumatized ego-self, creating space for genuine healing.
Central to Patanjali's philosophy is the distinction between atman (true consciousness, unchanging and eternal) and ego (the personal identity formed by experiences, conditioning, and trauma). Most trauma survivors become fused with their traumatized self—their identity becomes "I am broken," "I am damaged," or "I am a victim." Patanjali teaches that this identity is not atman but a constructed pattern of conditioned responses. Through meditation and philosophical inquiry, practitioners glimpse the witness consciousness—the atman that observes all experiences, including trauma, without being defined by them. This is not intellectual bypass but direct experiential shift. When a trauma survivor recognizes "I am aware of my fear, but I am not my fear," profound psychological freedom emerges. The witness perspective doesn't deny trauma's reality; it creates crucial distance between identity and experience. Patanjali's framework suggests that healing involves gradually dis-identifying from the traumatized ego-self while anchoring in the stable, essential witness consciousness that precedes, survives, and transcends all experiences.
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