The ultimate yogic state of integrated consciousness where trauma and healing coexist without fragmentation, offering a vision of post-trauma wholeness.
Samadhi, often translated as enlightenment or absorption, represents the unified, integrated state of consciousness where all parts of the mind-body-spirit operate in harmony. While this highest limb of yoga may seem distant to those in acute PTSD recovery, Patanjali's vision of samadhi offers crucial meaning: healing culminates not in erasure of trauma but in its integration into a coherent, whole self. Trauma creates fragmentation—dissociation, compartmentalized memories, disconnected body awareness. Recovery involves gradual reintegration: reconnecting body sensation with emotion and narrative, weaving trauma memory into broader life story, restoring continuity of self across time. Samadhi represents this endpoint: a consciousness where past trauma is acknowledged and integrated without dominating awareness. One can access difficult memories, feel appropriate emotions, and continue functioning with equanimity. In practical terms, samadhi-oriented trauma healing means moving beyond symptom suppression toward genuine integration—where the traumatic experience becomes part of one's narrative without defining it entirely. This vision counters despair and offers hope that wholeness remains possible even after profound fragmentation.
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.