Samskaras are the deep mental and emotional grooves carved by repeated experience; in attachment, they're the inherited and learned patterns we unconsciously recreate in partnerships.
Samskaras are psychological grooves or imprints—tendencies carved into our consciousness by repeated thought and action. Family of origin dynamics create powerful samskaras: if your parent was emotionally unavailable, you likely carry a samskara of seeking reassurance or avoiding vulnerability. If your family was enmeshed, you may have a samskara of losing yourself in relationships. These aren't fixed; the Yoga Sutras teach that conscious awareness gradually weakens samskaras while new, healthier patterns are strengthened through abhyasa. In adult relationships, recognizing your attachment samskaras—the familiar grooves of anxious pursuit, avoidant withdrawal, or people-pleasing—is liberating. You're not broken; you're responding from conditioned patterns. Partners can support each other's healing by acknowledging samskaras with compassion: "That's your samskara activating," rather than "You always do this." This reframes attachment struggles as learning opportunities, not character flaws, creating space for new patterns to develop through conscious relational practice.
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