Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Kaya Prasadana: Softening the Armored Body

Gradually releasing chronic muscle tension and protective armor through gentle embodied practice; restoring ease to the traumatized body.

Patan
Why It Matters

Kaya prasadana—lightness and ease in the physical body—emerges as a natural outcome of Patanjali's yoga practice, and it directly addresses C-PTSD's somatic signature: chronic tension, bracing, and protective armoring. Trauma survivors hold their survival strategy in their body—shoulders raised, jaw clenched, abdomen guarded, breathing restricted. This protective muscling once kept them safe but now maintains activation. Through gentle asana (physical postures), pranayama, and meditation that specifically attend to releasing muscular tension, kaya prasadana gradually develops. As the nervous system receives repeated signals of safety through practice, the body begins to soften; the person discovers ease is possible. This softening is not weakness but rather the restoration of natural resilience. When the body releases its protective armor, the nervous system receives feedback that the threat response can conclude. Paradoxically, this softening requires courage—the body fears that relaxing armor means returning to vulnerability. Patanjali's approach honors this by building safety through consistent practice before deep softening can occur, allowing the body to release its burden gradually and naturally.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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