Chitta Vritti Nirodhah is the stilling of mental fluctuations that reveals the space between stimulus and belief, enabling conscious choice.
Chitta Vritti Nirodhah, from the opening of Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, means the stilling or regulation of mental modifications. This is not suppression but the development of mental stability and clarity. When the mind is turbulent with constant thoughts and emotional reactions, beliefs operate on autopilot—we defend them, reinforce them, and identify with them without examination. By systematically stilling the mind through meditation, we create a gap between stimulus and response, between conditioning and belief. In this gap lies freedom. With a quieted mind, we can observe beliefs as objects of awareness rather than as truth itself. We notice how beliefs arise, persist, and fade. This direct observation dissolves many false beliefs without effort or struggle. The stilled mind also develops what neuroscience calls the default mode network's opposite state—less self-referential thinking and more openness to new perspectives. Chitta Vritti Nirodhah is therefore a foundational practice for sustainable belief transformation.
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