Cultivating the meditative state where consciousness observes trauma responses without identifying with them, creating distance and freedom.
Samadhi, the eighth limb of yoga, represents absorption into pure awareness—a state where the observer is distinct from what is observed. For trauma survivors, this distinction is liberating. The nervous system may activate with fear, memories may surface unbidden, and emotions may surge—but through samadhi practice, consciousness learns to witness these events without fusion. "I am having a panic response" becomes "awareness is observing a panic response occurring in this body." This shift is neurologically real: it engages the observing mind, which calms the reactive amygdala. Patanjali's framework shows that the Self (Purusha) is separate from mental content (Prakriti). When trauma survivors touch this observing consciousness through meditation or breathwork, they discover an untouched witness within themselves—a part that survived, that watches, that remains steady. This experiential knowledge that "I am not my trauma" becomes direct and visceral, not merely intellectual, catalyzing genuine psychological freedom and resilience.
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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