Patanjali's framework of mind-waves as the root cause of suffering, offering a diagnostic lens for understanding anxiety patterns.
Chitta vritti—the fluctuations and modifications of consciousness—forms the foundation of Patanjali's psychology. In the Yoga Sutras, these mental waves are identified as the source of all suffering, including what we now recognize as anxiety. Rather than viewing anxiety as a chemical imbalance or external threat alone, Patanjali invites us to observe the patterns of thought, emotion, and perception that create a sense of instability. This framework transforms anxiety from a pathology to overcome into a pattern of consciousness to witness and understand. By recognizing anxiety as vritti—temporary mental modifications—we gain psychological distance and agency. This contemplative diagnosis empowers practitioners to identify their specific anxiety patterns: worry-loops, anticipatory fear, rumination cycles. Understanding that these are fluctuations, not permanent conditions, fundamentally shifts how we relate to anxious experience and opens possibilities for genuine transformation through systematic practice.
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