Patanjali's principle of abhyasa (steady, persistent practice) as a foundational approach to managing psychotic symptoms through disciplined mental training.
Abhyasa—sustained, consistent effort over a long period—is one of Patanjali's two primary methods for achieving mental stability (the other being detachment). This concept directly addresses the treatment challenge in psychosis: symptom management requires unwavering commitment to practices despite difficulty and inconsistent results. Abhyasa suggests that daily meditation, mindfulness exercises, medication adherence, and therapeutic engagement are not one-time interventions but lifelong practices requiring discipline and patience. For individuals with schizophrenia, abhyasa reframes recovery not as quick cure but as gradual stabilization through consistent effort. This aligns with modern evidence that sustained engagement with treatment—pharmacological, psychological, and behavioral—produces better outcomes than sporadic intervention. Patanjali's emphasis on practice without attachment to immediate results is particularly relevant; individuals can commit to daily practices while accepting that psychotic symptoms may not immediately resolve, reducing demoralization and supporting long-term engagement with treatment and recovery practices.
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