The principle of consistent, dedicated practice that gradually weakens old beliefs and establishes new ones through neurological rewiring.
Abhyasa literally means practice and represents one of Patanjali's two primary methods for transformation (paired with vairagya, or detachment). In the context of beliefs, abhyasa is the systematic, sustained effort to practice new thought patterns, perspectives, and interpretations until they become the default neural pathway. Rather than trying to eliminate a limiting belief through willpower alone, abhyasa suggests deliberately and repeatedly embodying its opposite. If you hold the belief "I'm not capable," abhyasa means consistently identifying and celebrating moments of competence, mentally rehearsing capability, and embodying confident action. This repeated practice gradually rewires the neural substrates of belief. Patanjali emphasizes that abhyasa must be done with dedication over a long period, without interruption, and with sincere interest—conditions that align with modern neuroplasticity research. The practice transforms beliefs not through logical argument but through creating new experiential evidence that contradicts limiting patterns, allowing the nervous system to reorganize around expanded possibilities.
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