The yoga concept of samskara—mental impressions and conditioned patterns—explains how parts form around traumatic experiences and how they maintain protective roles across time.
Samskara refers to the subtle impressions and conditioned patterns formed in consciousness by repeated experiences and trauma. These samskaras function like grooves in the mind, causing automatic reactions and habitual responses. In Internal Family Systems, samskaras explain the origin and persistence of parts: a part protecting against abandonment formed from early loss leaves a deep samskara that continues activating in present relationships. Patanjali understood that samskaras create predictable patterns of thought and emotion. When we identify a part's samskara—the original imprint that shaped it—we understand its protective logic and can approach it with compassion. The IFS process of unburdening parts involves releasing these samskara, the deep impressions carried in the nervous system. Recognizing samskaras helps practitioners distinguish between a part's protective strategy and the trauma memory it guards, creating pathways for healing.
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