Patanjali's foundational principle that stilling mental fluctuations creates coherence among internal parts, enabling unified self-leadership.
Chitta Vritti Nirodha—the settling of mental modifications—directly parallels the IFS goal of achieving internal harmony among disparate parts. Patanjali recognized that the mind creates multiple thought-streams and reactive patterns that fragment consciousness. In IFS language, these are protective parts operating independently. By systematizing practices that calm mental noise, Patanjali's yoga offers a contemplative pathway to the same outcome: accessing the Self that can witness and coordinate all parts. This isn't suppression but integration. When mental fluctuations settle through meditation and ethical discipline, parts naturally recognize the larger Self-perspective, reducing competition and reactivity. For practitioners, this means developing witness consciousness alongside parts work—observing internal dynamics without judgment, creating space for dialogue and healing among previously fragmented identities.
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