Patanjali's concept of mental grooves explains how trauma creates deep neural pathways and why EMDR's repetitive reprocessing gradually weakens their automaticity.
Samskaras are impressions or grooves carved in the psyche by repeated experience. Patanjali uses this metaphor to explain how consciousness develops habitual patterns: each time an experience occurs, it deepens the groove, making the mental response more automatic. Trauma operates identically—the terrifying event carves a deep samskara, and each subsequent trigger deepens it further. The memory pathway becomes so grooved that the nervous system follows it automatically: threat triggers fear triggers freeze or flight without conscious choice. EMDR works by gradually wearing away these samskaras through reprocessing. The bilateral stimulation allows the memory to be held differently, breaking the automatic groove. With each pass, the pathway weakens slightly. Eventually, the memory can be accessed without the automatic cascade of terror. Patanjali teaches that samskaras are not permanent, not inherent to consciousness; they are simply habituation. This is liberating: if trauma carved the groove, sufficient alternative processing can smooth it. The EMDR practitioner, understanding samskaras, patiently facilitates the repetitive reprocessing that gradually restores the mind's natural responsiveness. The trauma survivor reclaims freedom not through forgetting but through breaking the automatic groove.
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