Consistent, dedicated practice (abhyasa) that rewires mental patterns and builds resistance to habitual cognitive biases over time.
Abhyasa—steady, long-term practice—is Patanjali's antidote to unconscious mental patterns. Cognitive biases persist because they're neurologically entrenched through repetition. Just as biases strengthen through unreflective habit, debiasing strengthens through deliberate practice. Abhyasa involves repeatedly choosing new mental responses: deliberately seeking disconfirming evidence against confirmation bias, actively considering alternative perspectives against anchoring effects, practicing numerical literacy against statistical biases. Patanjali emphasizes that lasting transformation requires sustained effort over extended time—a principle neuroscience confirms through neuroplasticity research. Unlike one-time interventions, abhyasa creates new neural pathways through consistent repetition. The framework recognizes that understanding biases intellectually differs fundamentally from embodying debiasing responses. Through abhyasa, practitioners gradually replace automatic biased reactions with conscious, evidence-based choices, transforming awareness into integrated behavioral change.
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