Deep psychological imprints from early relationships that create habitual attachment patterns, understood through Patanjali's concept of mental impressions.
Samskaras are the subtle impressions and conditioning patterns stored in consciousness that automatically generate thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. In attachment psychology, your early relational experiences with caregivers create samskaras—deep grooves in your psyche that determine how you relate to others. An insecurely attached person has samskaras that trigger anxiety, avoidance, or ambivalence in intimate relationships. Patanjali teaches that these impressions operate unconsciously until brought into awareness. Understanding your attachment samskaras means recognizing how your parent's emotional availability, responsiveness, or rejection shaped your current relational reflexes. Through sustained awareness practice, you can observe these imprints activating and gradually reprogram them. This requires patience and consistent self-observation, but it allows for genuine transformation beyond mere behavioral change into fundamental rewiring of your attachment templates.
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