The dissolution of deep psychological imprints and conditioning patterns that perpetuate PTSD long after the original traumatic event.
Samskaras are deep psychological imprints and conditioning patterns accumulated through repeated experiences. Trauma creates powerful samskaras: the nervous system becomes conditioned to interpret ordinary stimuli as threats, the mind develops automatic catastrophic predictions, and the body maintains chronic protective tension. These samskaras operate beneath conscious awareness, perpetuating PTSD through habit. Patanjali teaches that meditation and spiritual practice gradually dissolve samskaras, freeing consciousness from compulsive conditioning. For trauma survivors, this means recognizing that many PTSD reactions aren't chosen responses but automatic samskaras—patterns worn deep into the psyche through repetition. By bringing witness consciousness to these patterns without judgment, practitioners gradually weaken their hold. Somatic practices help release samskaras stored in the body. Meditation creates space between stimulus and reaction, allowing new grooves to form. Over time, the nervous system's trauma-driven conditioning softens, and survivors experience genuine freedom—not freedom from memory but freedom from being unconsciously controlled by trauma's deepest patterns. This addresses PTSD at its root cause rather than merely managing symptoms.
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