The principle of steadiness (sthira) and comfort (sukha) in practice; for C-PTSD, the delicate balance between pushing through avoidance and respecting nervous system capacity.
Patanjali's aphorism that asana (posture/practice) should embody both sthira (steadiness, strength) and sukha (ease, comfort) is a profound principle for trauma recovery. C-PTSD creates a paradox: avoidance prevents healing, yet pushing too hard triggers dysregulation and retraumatization. Sthira-sukha offers a middle path. Sthira without sukha becomes forcing, dissociation, or aggressive willpower—common in trauma survivors who learned survival through overriding body signals. Sukha without sthira becomes passive avoidance and collapse. The wisdom is the balance: staying present (sthira) with discomfort while also honoring capacity limits (sukha). In practical trauma work, this means: "I will feel this emotion (sthira), and I will also be gentle with myself (sukha)." It's neither "just get over it" nor "I can't do this." Patanjali's framework suggests this balance is cultivable through patient practice. For C-PTSD survivors, this principle becomes a compass: when facing triggering material, asking "How do I hold steadiness while also maintaining ease?" enables pacing that heals rather than retraumatizes.
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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