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Concept
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Chitta Vritti Nirodha for Trauma Response

Patanjali's foundational principle of stilling mental fluctuations offers a direct pathway to interrupt traumatic thought loops and obsessive patterns characteristic of C-PTSD.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali defines yoga as "chitta vritti nirodha"—the cessation of mental modifications. In C-PTSD, the mind becomes locked in repetitive trauma loops: intrusive memories, hypervigilance, catastrophic thinking. These vrittis (fluctuations) feel involuntary and overwhelming. Patanjali's framework teaches that the mind can be trained, like any muscle, to observe thoughts without identification. Through systematic practice of concentration and witnessing, the traumatized nervous system begins to recognize the gap between stimulus and response. This gap is liberation. Rather than fighting memories or suppressing emotions, the practitioner learns to create mental stillness beneath the turbulence. This approach validates trauma's neurological reality while offering concrete psychological agency: the mind's restlessness is not permanent; it can be gradually mastered through disciplined attention and non-reactive awareness.

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Mental Health
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