The yogic principle of finding steadiness and ease simultaneously in physical postures, teaching trauma survivors to build resilience without rigidity.
Patanjali's teaching that asana (physical posture) should embody both sthira (strength, stability) and sukham (ease, comfort) offers profound guidance for trauma recovery. PTSD often creates a false choice: either rigid control (bracing, tension, dissociation) or collapse (numbness, helplessness). This principle teaches a third way. In physical practice, it means engaging muscles without tension, moving with intention while maintaining fluidity. For trauma survivors, this translates to building psychological resilience—the ability to be strong without hardening, to face difficulty without breaking. The body learns first; when asana practice cultivates balanced strength and ease, the nervous system recognizes that these states can coexist. This rewires the trauma response, which typically oscillates between hyperarousal (fighting) and shutdown (freezing). Sthira sukham teaches the nervous system a grounded middle ground where survivors feel both capable and safe.
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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