The yama of truthfulness supports trauma recovery by enabling survivors to name their experience and move from shame-based secrecy toward authentic presence.
Satya, the second yama, mandates truthfulness—speaking and living in alignment with reality. Trauma thrives in silence and denial; survivors often keep experiences secret, creating internal fragmentation between what happened and the socially acceptable narratives they maintain. Patanjali's satya principle invites survivors to name their truth: 'I was harmed,' 'I am struggling,' 'I need support.' This naming is profoundly healing. Secrecy compounds trauma's isolating power; truth-telling begins to dissolve shame's grip. Satya doesn't mean indiscriminate disclosure but conscious, grounded acknowledgment of reality. In therapy, this means speaking the unspeakable; in relationships, it means honest communication about needs and triggers; internally, it means ceasing self-deception about symptoms or progress. This alignment with truth gradually restores the survivor's relationship with reality itself, which trauma had distorted. By practicing satya consistently, survivors step out of trauma's shadowy existence into authentic presence, building integrity within themselves and honest connection with others—essential foundations for lasting healing and renewed trust in self and world.
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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