The yogic state of integrated awareness where fragmented trauma consciousness reunites into coherent selfhood and presence.
Samadhi—absorption, integration, unified consciousness—is yoga's ultimate aim and deeply relevant to C-PTSD's core wound: fragmentation. Complex trauma shatters consciousness into dissociated parts, lost time, and fractured identity. Patanjali describes samadhi as the state where the observer, observation, and observed merge; subject-object duality dissolves. This is not mystical fantasy—it is the psychological opposite of dissociation. In samadhi, you experience yourself as whole, continuous, and present. While full samadhi is an advanced state, yoga practice cultivates samadhi's seeds: moments of genuine presence where the internal war quiets. These glimpses of integration—even brief ones—rewire your nervous system's understanding of safety and coherence. For C-PTSD, the path to samadhi means gradually integrating dissociated memories, aligning body and mind, and recovering lost time through embodied awareness. Samadhi represents psychological and spiritual wholeness as your birthright.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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