Patanjali's practice of intentional repetition establishes memory and automaticity—the discipline required to move from conscious effort to mastered competence across Bloom's levels.
Abhyasa means devoted, continuous practice done with full awareness and intention. Patanjali argues that understanding deepens only through sustained, mindful repetition—not rote mechanical drills but conscious engagement. This directly addresses the gap in Bloom's Taxonomy: learners often plateau between "Understand" and "Apply" because they skip abhyasa's discipline. Modern learning science validates this: mastery requires 10,000+ hours of deliberate practice. Abhyasa isn't punishment but purposeful engagement where each repetition refines perception and deepens comprehension. Patanjali teaches that resistance and boredom emerge when practice lacks intention; with clear purpose, repetition becomes meditative and transformative. For educators, abhyasa reframes practice from tedious homework into sacred ritual of skill-building. The yogic lens reveals that moving through Bloom's higher levels demands not just cognitive capability but commitment to persistent, conscious engagement—turning practice into the foundation of genuine mastery and psychological transformation.
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