Patanjali's principle of steady, long-term effort that rewires neural pathways, providing a realistic framework for ADHD habit-building that honors neurological differences.
Abhyasa—practice performed with consistency, devotion, and over a long period—is Patanjali's antidote to the monkey mind. This concept directly addresses ADHD's struggle with sustained effort and habit formation. Rather than expecting willpower or instant results, abhyasa acknowledges that transformation requires repeated exposure over time. Crucially, Patanjali emphasizes that this practice must be performed with genuine interest and adaptability; rigid, joyless repetition fails. For ADHD brains, this means designing practices that leverage hyperfocus, novelty-seeking, and intrinsic motivation. Small, repeated actions compound into neural retraining. Abhyasa reframes ADHD challenges: not as moral failures, but as invitations to patient, repeated practice aligned with your neurology. Whether building morning routines, meditation practice, or organizational systems, abhyasa provides the philosophical foundation for sustainable change without self-judgment or unrealistic expectations of perfection.
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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