Patanjali's principle of abhyasa—devoted, repeated practice—provides a framework for building attention capacity through small, frequent repetitions rather than forcing long focus sessions.
Abhyasa, meaning "practice" or "effort," is one of the two pillars of Patanjali's path to mental mastery, alongside vairāgya (non-attachment). For ADHD individuals, abhyasa reframes attention-building as a gradual cultivation process rather than an all-or-nothing achievement. Instead of demanding two-hour focus blocks, abhyasa encourages short, consistent practices repeated daily. This aligns with how ADHD brains actually learn best: through frequent, brief engagements with focused attention. Whether meditation, journaling, or focused work, the principle is repetition over intensity. Patanjali teaches that through sustained practice, mental pathways strengthen and new habits form. For ADHD management, abhyasa becomes your practical ally—meditating five minutes daily proves more transformative than occasional hour-long sessions, building attention as a skill that compounds over time through consistency.
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