The yoga principle of stilling mental fluctuations directly addresses how trauma keeps the mind trapped in reactive patterns.
Patanjali's foundational definition—yoga as the cessation of mental modifications—offers a precise framework for understanding trauma's grip on consciousness. Trauma creates sticky vritti (thought patterns) that loop obsessively: intrusive memories, hypervigilance, shame narratives. By recognizing these patterns as mental fluctuations rather than truth, practitioners gain psychological distance. Patanjali's eight-limbed path provides systematic practices—pranayama (breath control) and pratyahara (sensory withdrawal)—that calm the nervous system's trauma response. Unlike suppression, this approach acknowledges the pattern while training the mind to settle naturally. For PTSD sufferers, this means transforming the relationship with traumatic memories from reactive re-experiencing to observed phenomena. The practice cultivates witness consciousness, allowing survivors to process trauma without being overwhelmed by it.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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