Samskara describes mental impressions and conditioning patterns that shape perception; these correspond to CBT's schemas and learned associations.
Samskara refers to subtle mental impressions left by thoughts, actions, and experiences—essentially the mind's conditioning patterns. These ancient samskaras function identically to CBT schemas: deeply ingrained templates for perceiving and responding to the world. A person with childhood trauma develops samskaras of threat and mistrust that automatically color current social interactions. Just as CBT targets schema modification, Patanjali understood that transforming consciousness requires identifying and gradually reshaping samskaras. Neurologically, samskaras correspond to neural pathways strengthened by repetition; behavioral and cognitive practices literally reshape these grooves. CBT's repeated behavioral experiments and thought records work precisely this way—by creating new experiences that contradict samskara-based predictions, clients gradually lay down new neural pathways and mental impressions. Importantly, Patanjali recognized that samskaras don't vanish overnight; transformation requires sustained abhyasa (practice) gradually depositing new, healthier impressions into the psyche. By framing therapeutic work as samskara transformation, clients understand that their effort literally rewires their conditional patterns through consistent, dedicated practice over time.
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