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Concept
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Abhyasa: Sustained Practice and Rewiring

Patanjali's principle of continuous, dedicated practice that rewires neural pathways and cognitive habits, replacing distorted patterns with clearer mental states.

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Why It Matters

Abhyasa, meaning "practice" or "effort," is Patanjali's foundational principle for transformation. The Yoga Sutras teach that sustained, intentional practice gradually weakens mental patterns while strengthening new neural pathways toward clarity and equanimity. This directly addresses cognitive distortions: they persist because of years of repetition, automatic firing, and reinforcement. Abhyasa requires consistent effort to interrupt these habitual patterns and establish healthier cognitive responses. Unlike one-time insights that fade, abhyasa creates lasting change through deliberate, repeated engagement with practices that cultivate witnessing consciousness and rational perspective. Patanjali emphasizes that this practice must be long-term, uninterrupted, and performed with sincere devotion to be effective. For cognitive distortion change, abhyasa means daily mental discipline—meditation, self-inquiry, reframing—until new patterns of clear thinking become as automatic as the distorted ones were before.

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