Periagoge
Concept
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Avidya and Trauma-Based False Identity

Patanjali identifies avidya (fundamental ignorance) as the root of suffering; trauma creates avidya by convincing survivors their traumatic identity is their true self.

Patan
Why It Matters

Avidya—mistaking the temporary for the eternal, the conditioned for the unconditional—is yoga's first kleshas (afflictions). Trauma is avidya's perfect vehicle: it convinces survivors that their most broken, terrified, ashamed moments define their essence. A trauma survivor may believe 'I am damaged, unworthy, broken'—avidya in its purest form. Patanjali teaches that beneath trauma, beneath conditioning, lies pure consciousness untouched by incident. This isn't toxic positivity but fundamental metaphysics: consciousness itself is never traumatized; trauma impacts the mind's patterns, not consciousness's nature. Recognizing avidya as false identification—not truth—creates possibility for healing. Practices that reveal consciousness (meditation, witnessing techniques, pranayama) gradually dissolve trauma-based identity. Survivors begin distinguishing between 'I experienced trauma' (fact) and 'I am trauma' (avidya). This subtle shift—moving from identification to witnessing—unwires the nervous system's investment in traumatic narrative and restores access to the unchanged, whole consciousness beneath all experience.

Helpful guides
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Mental Health
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