Samskaras are psychological imprints from repeated experience that determine how we encode and retrieve cultural memory.
Samskara literally means 'impression' or 'imprint,' describing how repeated actions leave grooves in consciousness that determine future responses. Patanjali identifies samskaras as the mechanism through which learning becomes automatic and cultural knowledge embeds itself across minds and societies. Each encounter with a teaching leaves an impression; repetition deepens the groove until behavior and memory become unified. This concept explains why certain cultural practices survive millennia—they create powerful samskaras that self-perpetuate through families and communities. The Yoga Sutras teach that purifying samskaras requires awareness: observing which impressions serve growth and which bind us to limitation. For memory across cultures, understanding samskaras reveals why some traditions stick while others fade, and how intentional practice can reshape what we retain and transmit to future generations.
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