Patanjali's principle of acceptance helps C-PTSD survivors practice patience with non-linear healing while celebrating incremental progress.
Santosha—contentment, peaceful acceptance, and gratitude for what is—is Patanjali's antidote to the perfectionism and self-rejection that trap complex trauma survivors in suffering loops. C-PTSD healing is profoundly non-linear: good days alternate with regression, progress isn't measurable, and the goal remains unclear. Many survivors respond with harsh self-judgment: 'Why am I still triggered? I should be healed by now. I'm failing.' Santosha offers radical alternative: meeting reality without the suffering layer of resistance. This doesn't mean accepting trauma or stopping healing efforts. Rather, santosha cultivates appreciation for incremental progress: 'Today I felt my grief instead of numbing. That's evolution. Today I set a boundary. That's growth. Today I had a flashback and I grounded myself. That's mastery.' Santosha retrains the mind from deficit-focus to competence-focus. Survivors begin noticing what's working rather than obsessing over what remains broken. This positive attention literally rewires neural pathways, supporting both healing and resilience. Santosha doesn't eliminate ambition for transformation; it removes the self-punishment that sabotages healing. Paradoxically, accepting 'where I am' with compassion creates the psychological safety where genuine healing accelerates.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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