Periagoge
Concept
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Chitta Vritti Nirodhah: Cessation of Mental Modification Through Addiction

Patanjali's foundational definition of yoga as cessation of mental modifications directly applies to breaking addiction's cycle of compulsive thought and automatized behavior.

Patan
Why It Matters

Chitta vritti nirodhah—'the cessation of the modifications of the mind'—is Patanjali's opening definition of yoga and the ultimate goal of his system. Addiction is precisely the opposite: a state of uncontrolled, repetitive mental modification where craving, justification, and compulsive urge dominate consciousness. Recovery through Patanjali's lens involves progressively stilling these addictive mental fluctuations. This requires both reducing the neurochemical hijacking (why medical treatment matters) and cultivating mental discipline through yoga practices. As mental modifications decrease through meditation and mindfulness, the addicted person experiences increasing clarity, capacity for choice, and access to deeper peace beneath the turbulent surface of craving and reactivity. The yoga practices—asana, pranayama, dharana, dhyana—progressively calm the mind until, eventually, even the impulse toward addictive behavior subsides naturally because it arises from stilled, clear consciousness rather than agitated, conditioned patterns.

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Mental Health
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