Patanjali's concept of tapas—the disciplined heat of practice that burns away impurities—reframes the discomfort of trauma work as purifying rather than merely painful.
Tapas literally means heat or fire and refers to the transformative intensity generated by disciplined practice. In trauma recovery, this concept is profoundly important: healing is not comfortable. Survivors must approach their nervous system's activation, their suppressed emotions, their fragmented memories. Without understanding tapas, this discomfort seems like failure or harm. With it, the heat becomes purposeful purification. When practicing pranayama or meditation, survivors may encounter uncomfortable sensations, emotions, or memories; tapas acknowledges this is the work of transformation, not something going wrong. This ancient concept parallels modern somatic therapy's understanding that accessing and releasing held trauma creates temporary intensification before relief. Tapas also implies that transformation requires committed effort—not passive hoping for improvement but active, sometimes difficult engagement with practice. For PTSD survivors, understanding tapas provides psychological permission to experience the discomfort of healing as meaningful rather than pathological. It reframes the heat of recovery as sacred work, the fire that ultimately purifies trauma's hold on the psyche.
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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