The yogic concept of subconscious memory impressions that shape perception and behavior invisibly, revealing why we forget what conflicts with deeper conditioning.
Vasana—Sanskrit for 'smell' or 'perfume'—describes the subtle residues of experience stored in the deeper layers of consciousness. These are latent memory seeds that remain after the surface memory of an event fades. Patanjali's framework suggests that what we remember and forget is heavily determined by these vasanas: impressions accumulated from countless lifetimes of experience. We don't forget randomly; we forget what contradicts our deepest vasanas and remember what reinforces them. This explains why identical events create radically different memories in different people—their conditioning filters determine what stays and what vanishes. The unconscious mind uses vasanas to construct memory narratives that preserve psychological continuity and identity. Understanding vasana transforms memory failure from a defect into an intelligible process: the mind is working perfectly to maintain consistent identity, even if that means distorting or suppressing inconvenient truths. Yoga practice involves gradually excavating and purifying vasanas, which naturally improves memory's accuracy by reducing the distortion caused by hidden conditioning.
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