Patanjali's concept of mental modifications reveals ADHD as natural mind-wave patterns rather than defects, teaching acceptance and skillful navigation of racing thoughts.
Chitta vritti—the fluctuations or modifications of consciousness—is Patanjali's term for the constant rippling of the mind. The Yoga Sutras describe stilling these waves as the core practice. For ADHD individuals, this concept validates lived experience: your mind isn't broken; it's simply generating more waves, faster waves, sometimes turbulent waves. Rather than fighting or medicating away this nature, Patanjali's framework invites you to understand the patterns. Some vritti are helpful (focused thought); others are obstacles (rumination, hyperfocus spirals, decision paralysis). The practice becomes not elimination but discernment. What vritti serves your intention right now? Which distracts you? This mental literacy transforms shame into understanding. You stop asking "Why can't I focus?" and start asking "Which mental waves am I riding today, and which ones need steering?" This shift from pathology to phenomenology is deeply empowering for ADHD self-compassion and effective self-management.
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.