Patanjali's foundational definition of yoga as stilling mental fluctuations applies directly to the obsessive thought patterns that perpetuate eating disorders.
Chitta vritti nirodhah—yoga as the stilling of mental fluctuations—is Patanjali's core definition. For eating disorder sufferers, the mind becomes a relentless loop of food obsession, body checking, calorie calculation, and shame spirals. These vritti (thought patterns) dominate consciousness, creating a prison of repetitive mental chatter. Patanjali's framework reveals that eating disorders are ultimately disorders of the chitta—the confused, restless mind projecting fear and control onto the body through food. Recovery requires systematically stilling these fluctuations through pranayama (breath work), meditation, and philosophical inquiry into why the mind became fixated. As mental turbulence settles, the noise diminishes. Genuine hunger signals, satiety cues, and intuitive knowing emerge from beneath the static. This is not about willpower but about fundamentally quieting the disturbed mind that generates disordered eating.
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