Understanding trauma as a samskara (deep impression) that can be gradually rewired through consistent practice and new experience.
Samskara, a Sanskrit term meaning impression, groove, or conditioning, describes how repeated experiences carve neural pathways. Patanjali teaches that samskaras underlie behavior; we tend to repeat patterns because they are etched into consciousness. Trauma creates powerful samskaras—automatic fear responses, avoidance behaviors, negative beliefs. Traditional psychology calls this conditioning; Yoga philosophy recognizes these same patterns as samskaras requiring active undoing. The key insight is that samskaras are not permanent; new experiences, particularly repeated ones, gradually inscribe new grooves. A trauma survivor who repeatedly practices safety (through grounding, trusted relationships, predictable routines) gradually creates new samskaras of safety. Each mindful choice, each conscious breath, each moment of felt security overwrites the old trauma-impression slightly. Patanjali's framework teaches patience: deep samskaras require sustained effort to transform, but transformation is always possible. This understanding is profoundly hopeful for PTSD sufferers who feel trapped in automatic reactions. By recognizing trauma as samskara rather than immutable identity or neurological destiny, practitioners reclaim agency in slowly, steadily rewiring their deepest patterns through deliberate practice and intentional living.
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