Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Atman: Witnessing Consciousness Beyond Trauma Identity

The deeper self or witnessing consciousness that remains untouched by trauma, accessible as a refuge and foundation for healing.

Patan
Why It Matters

Atman, in Hindu philosophy underlying Patanjali's teachings, refers to the eternal self or consciousness that transcends individual experience, suffering, and change. For trauma survivors, atman represents something profound: the awareness that observes trauma without being defined by it. Trauma fragments identity and self-concept. Survivors may feel they are only their wounds, their symptoms, their survival. The atman principle teaches that there is a dimension of consciousness—the witness, the observer—that experiences trauma without being traumatized. This isn't spiritual bypassing of real pain but recognition of a deeper continuity of consciousness beneath the trauma's turbulence. Accessing even subtle awareness of this witnessing consciousness provides psychological refuge. Meditation and contemplative practice gradually strengthen identification with atman rather than with traumatized ego. This shift is transformative: instead of 'I am traumatized,' the perspective becomes 'I am aware of trauma,' which restores agency and distance. Atman as the true self untouched by circumstance becomes the foundation for healing identity reorganization.

Helpful guides
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Mental Health
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