Patanjali's stages of samadhi (absorption/integration) map the trajectory of trauma recovery: from fragmented, dysregulated consciousness to unified, integrated awareness.
Samadhi—variously translated as absorption, integration, or unified consciousness—represents the culmination of Patanjali's system. Though often presented as an advanced spiritual state, samadhi directly parallels the neurobiological and psychological integration that trauma survivors achieve through EMDR. Trauma fragments consciousness: memories exist disconnected from narrative time, emotions are dissociated from awareness, bodily sensations trigger unconscious reactivity. The fragmented state mirrors what Patanjali calls a contracted, distorted consciousness. EMDR's bilateral stimulation and processing facilitate a gradual movement toward samadhi by allowing the brain to integrate traumatic material: memories become linked to the present moment, emotions are acknowledged and processed, somatic markers are released. As integration occurs, the survivor experiences expanded awareness, greater access to agency, and unified consciousness across past, present, and self. The framework shows that trauma recovery isn't just about symptom relief but about restoring the fundamental integration of consciousness. Samadhi becomes both a conceptual goal and a lived experience: the return to wholeness that EMDR facilitates at neurological and experiential levels.
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