The ultimate state of unified consciousness in Patanjali's system; for C-PTSD, a model of integration where fragmented parts cohere into coherent awareness.
Samadhi—often translated as enlightenment or absorption—is Patanjali's ultimate goal: consciousness unified with its object, the knower and known as one. While this spiritual state seems distant from C-PTSD's fragmentation, the underlying principle is profoundly relevant. Complex trauma fragments consciousness: different nervous system states (freeze, fight, flight), dissociated memory, contradictory beliefs about self and world. Samadhi, translated for trauma work, is the capacity to integrate these fragments into coherent presence. This doesn't mean trauma disappears; it means the whole system—body, emotion, mind—functions as an integrated whole rather than isolated, conflicting parts. Modern trauma therapy mirrors this: integration is the goal, not elimination of symptoms. Patanjali's eight-fold path is actually a systematic map toward this integration. For C-PTSD survivors, samadhi represents the possibility of wholeness: the capacity to be fully present with all parts of oneself, to hold complexity without fragmentation, to experience life directly rather than through dissociative filters.
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.