The practice of truthfulness enables trauma survivors to reconstruct coherent narratives and reclaim authentic voice.
Satya, Patanjali's principle of truthfulness, addresses a central trauma wound: the silencing and narrative fragmentation survivors experience. Trauma often involves deception, betrayal, or forced secrecy that shatters the survivor's relationship to truth itself. The path to healing requires reconstruction of what actually happened, differentiation between what is remembered and what is projected, and integration into a coherent life narrative. Satya demands rigorous honesty without judgment: acknowledging both victim experience and one's own harmful responses, complexity and contradiction. This isn't about public disclosure but internal truthfulness—seeing oneself and one's history clearly. As survivors practice satya, they reclaim voice, rebuild trust in their perception, and integrate fragmented experiences into a meaningful whole. Authentic narrative restores agency and dignity, transforming victimhood into survivorship with conscious meaning-making.
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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