The foundational yogic principle of cessation of mind-stuff, directly addressing how mindfulness interrupts habitual psychological patterns.
Patanjali's opening definition of yoga as 'chitta vritti nirodhah'—the stilling of mental fluctuations—provides the philosophical bedrock for mindfulness as psychological intervention. Rather than suppressing thoughts, this practice recognizes that our suffering stems from identification with mental turbulence. By observing thoughts without reactivity, we create psychological distance from automatic patterns. This transforms mindfulness from mere observation into active mental mastery. When applied clinically, this principle explains how mindfulness reduces rumination, anxiety, and depressive cycles. The practice trains awareness to recognize mental fluctuations before they crystallize into emotional suffering. Patanjali's framework suggests that psychological freedom emerges not from changing thoughts but from changing our relationship to them, making this ancient wisdom remarkably aligned with contemporary cognitive-behavioral interventions.
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.