Patanjali's practice of stilling the mind's fluctuations offers a direct pathway to interrupt the obsessive replaying of traumatic memories.
Patanjali's foundational definition—yoga as the cessation of mental modifications (chitta vritti nirodha)—provides a precise framework for understanding trauma. Traumatic memories create repetitive mental patterns that hijack consciousness, causing the mind to relive events involuntarily. Through systematic observation and regulation of these mental patterns, practitioners create distance from traumatic content rather than fighting it directly. This approach teaches trauma survivors that healing doesn't require erasing memories, but rather changing their relationship to them. By practicing witness awareness—observing thoughts without identification—individuals can interrupt the automatic neural pathways trauma has carved. Patanjali's methodology transforms trauma recovery from suppression into transcendence, enabling the mind to process difficult experiences while maintaining equanimity. This classical framework aligns with modern somatic and cognitive approaches to PTSD treatment.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.