Patanjali's samadhi—unified consciousness—describes the integrated state EMDR facilitates when fragmented trauma memories become coherent and metabolized.
Samadhi in Patanjali's system represents the highest state of consciousness: complete absorption, unity, and absence of fragmentation. Trauma fundamentally fragments the self—splitting memory, sensation, emotion, and meaning into dissociated compartments that cannot communicate. EMDR's core mechanism restores integration by processing traumatic material through bilateral stimulation, allowing the brain's left and right hemispheres to coordinate and weave traumatic fragments into coherent narrative memory. This movement toward samadhi—toward wholeness—is the natural outcome of successful trauma processing. The post-EMDR state mirrors samadhi's characteristics: clarity, freedom from involuntary mental reactivity, restored sense of self, and reconnection between body and mind. Understanding trauma recovery as movement toward samadhi reframes healing not as symptom elimination but as restoration of the unified consciousness that trauma temporarily obscured. This perspective honors both psychology and contemplative wisdom.
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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