Satya (truthfulness) describes the essential process of giving voice to traumatic truth that EMDR facilitates, moving from dissociated fragments to coherent narrative.
Satya, Patanjali's principle of truthfulness, extends beyond mere honesty to alignment between inner experience and outer expression—bringing what is secretly held into authentic speech. Trauma by definition silences: whether through explicit injunctions against disclosure, shame-based concealment, or dissociation's neurological silencing, traumatic truth becomes un-speakable and un-nameable. EMDR's processing naturally culminates in satya: as bilateral stimulation facilitates integration, clients spontaneously gain capacity to articulate what happened, what it meant, and what they survived. The adaptive information processing model underlying EMDR suggests that trauma remains "stuck" partly because its narrative remains fragmented and unspoken. By facilitating access to traumatic material in a safe context, EMDR creates conditions where the nervous system can finally give voice to truth. This speaking—whether to the therapist, in writing, or eventually to trusted others—marks a fundamental shift from secret-keeping isolation toward authentic presence. Satya in trauma recovery means integrating traumatic truth into one's story not as shame to hide but as reality that shapes wisdom and resilience.
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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