Repeated, sustained effort to cultivate stable political understanding and interrupt automatic reactive patterns in governance and citizenship.
Abhyasa, Patanjali's principle of persistent practice, transforms political psychology by shifting focus from momentary decisions to sustained behavioral cultivation. In politics, abhyasa means developing consistent practices—deliberative forums, citizen councils, regular cross-partisan dialogue—that rewire habitual reactive patterns. Democratic systems fail when participants default to tribal responses; abhyasa creates new neural pathways through repetition. Political leaders who practice regular reflection develop greater emotional regulation and perspective-taking. Citizens who habitually engage with opposing viewpoints gradually rewire their defensive responses. Patanjali teaches that mental transformation requires months and years of steady practice, not intellectual insight alone. This challenges modern politics' expectation of instant conversion through debate. Effective political psychology interventions must therefore emphasize sustained behavioral practice: recurring deliberation structures, habitual exposure to different perspectives, and institutional designs that normalize cooperation. Abhyasa reveals why one-time educational interventions fail; transformation requires disciplined repetition.
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