Patanjali identifies avidya (fundamental misperception of reality) as the root of all suffering, including how trauma creates distorted beliefs that drive reactive behavior and perpetuate wound cycles.
In Patanjali's system, avidya—misperception or ignorance—is the root of all suffering (klisha). Trauma is avidya in action: a survivor misperceives current safety as danger, misidentifies themselves as permanently broken, misunderstands another person's neutral expression as hostile. These distortions aren't character flaws but understandable defensive misperceptions born from traumatic experience. Patanjali teaches that healing requires correcting these misperceptions through direct insight and practice. This isn't intellectual understanding but felt, embodied knowing developed through meditation and mindful exposure to disconfirming evidence. As avidya gradually clears—often slowly and non-linearly—survivors experience reality more accurately: this moment is safe, this person can be trusted, I am resilient. This shift from trauma-distorted perception to clear perception is the essence of healing.
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