Patanjali's definition of yoga as stilling the turbulent waves of the mind directly addresses the intrusive thoughts and emotional dysregulation characteristic of unprocessed trauma.
Vritti nirodha—the cessation of mental fluctuations—is Patanjali's foundational definition of yoga. Trauma survivors experience constant mental turbulence: intrusive thoughts, flashbacks, hypervigilance, and rumination create a perpetually disturbed mental state. These vrittis (thought-waves) keep the nervous system activated and prevent genuine rest. EMDR works by creating conditions where the brain's natural processing mechanisms can calm these waves through bilateral stimulation. Patanjali's psychology recognizes that disturbance at the mental level blocks learning and transformation. By systematically reducing vritti through both traditional practices and trauma-informed EMDR protocols, consciousness stabilizes. When the mind becomes still, trauma material can be accessed, processed, and integrated without the constant background noise of dysregulation. This classical framework validates why settling the mind becomes prerequisite for successful trauma work.
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