Patanjali's core definition of yoga—stilling the mind's patterns—liberates from the repetitive narrative loops that perpetuate attachment wounds.
Patanjali's foundational definition—"yogash chitta vritti nirodhah" (yoga is the stilling of the mind's patterns)—becomes revolutionary for attachment work. Your attachment style isn't your identity; it's a pattern of mental fluctuations repeated so habitually you believe it's who you are. Anxious attachment involves endless mind-patterns: catastrophizing about abandonment, creating worst-case narratives, seeking reassurance loops. Avoidant attachment generates patterns of disconnection, intellectualization, and self-protective stories. These aren't truth; they're mental grooves worn deep by repetition. Patanjali teaches that liberation comes through training the mind to recognize and gradually still these patterns rather than being possessed by them. When your partner doesn't immediately respond, rather than the automatic thought-pattern "They don't love me," you notice the pattern arising and choose different engagement. When urges toward avoidance emerge, you observe them as mind-waves rather than absolute directives. This distinction is transformative: you're not broken, you're operating automatic programs. Through meditation, conscious awareness, and deliberate practice, these deeply ingrained attachment patterns gradually quiet, revealing your essential nature beneath the conditioning. This is genuine psychological freedom within relationship.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.