The foundational yogic principle of calming mental fluctuations offers a direct pathway for trauma survivors to interrupt intrusive thoughts and regain psychological stability.
Patanjali's opening definition of yoga—"chitta vritti nirodhah" (the stilling of mental fluctuations)—provides trauma survivors with a precise diagnostic framework for understanding PTSD. Intrusive memories, flashbacks, and hypervigilance are essentially uncontrolled mental waves triggered by trauma imprints. Rather than fighting these waves directly, Patanjali's system teaches systematic observation and gentle redirection. Through pranayama (breath regulation) and dharana (concentration), survivors learn to create psychological distance from traumatic content. This is not suppression but mastery: the mind becomes the instrument rather than its victim. The Yoga Sutras suggest that by stabilizing attention itself, the nervous system naturally settles, allowing the traumatized psyche to reorganize around safety rather than threat. This approach addresses trauma's core mechanism—dysregulated attention and perception—at its source.
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