The highest yoga state represents integrated consciousness where trauma's fragmentation dissolves; it's the ultimate destination of systematic trauma-informed yoga practice.
Samadhi, yoga's final fruit, represents unified awareness where the observer, observation, and observed merge into seamless consciousness. Trauma causes psychological fragmentation—dissociation, compartmentalization, internal conflict between different trauma-conditioned parts of self. The systematic progression of yoga limbs (ethical foundation, physical practice, breath work, sensory withdrawal, concentration, meditation) gradually moves the traumatized mind toward integration. Patanjali teaches that this isn't transcendence away from life but full participation in it from a place of wholeness. For PTSD survivors, samadhi represents the possibility of trauma integration: memories and body sensations remain, but they're held within expanded awareness rather than fragmenting consciousness. This state isn't achieved through force but emerges naturally as the nervous system settles and the mind's chronic hypervigilance releases. The journey toward samadhi involves gradually reclaiming disowned aspects of self that trauma scattered and developing the capacity to witness all experience—painful and peaceful—without being consumed by it. Patanjali's eight-fold path offers a roadmap: trauma recovery isn't just symptom management but transformation toward wholeness, peace, and integrated being.
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.