Patanjali's concept of samskaras—deep mental grooves formed by repeated experience—reveals how trauma creates neural pathways and how consistent practice creates new, healing patterns.
Samskaras are the subtle impressions or grooves carved into consciousness by repeated experience, forming habitual patterns and reactive tendencies. Trauma literally creates deep samskaras: the nervous system becomes conditioned to perceive danger, freeze, or flee in response to trauma-associated cues. A survivor may instinctively recoil at loud noises or sudden movements long after the original threat has passed because these samskaras have become automatized. Patanjali's genius is recognizing that samskaras can be retrained. Just as trauma creates negative neural pathways through repetition, healing practices create positive ones through consistent, intentional repetition. Yoga, pranayama, and meditation act as reconditioning tools, gradually overwriting fear-based samskaras with patterns of safety, resilience, and presence. This aligns perfectly with modern trauma neuroscience showing that the brain's plasticity allows new learning to reshape conditioned responses. For PTSD recovery, understanding samskaras explains why symptoms feel automatic and why consistent practice—not one-time insight—creates lasting change.
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.