Patanjali's core definition of yoga as stilling mental fluctuations, which reveals and dissolves the thought patterns underlying unwanted behavioral habits.
The opening of the Yoga Sutras defines yoga as "chitta vritti nirodhah"—the cessation of mental fluctuations. This principle directly addresses behavior change because unwanted habits are sustained by repetitive thought patterns and mental conditioning. Patanjali teaches that the mind naturally produces vritti (fluctuations, ripples, patterns), and these create the psychological scaffolding of habits. A person addicted to social media doesn't just have a behavioral problem; they have an underlying thought pattern: "I need stimulation," "I'm bored," "I'm anxious." The habit is the behavioral manifestation of the vritti. By stilling mental fluctuations through meditation, pranayama, and mindfulness, practitioners observe the thought patterns without identification. This creates psychological distance: "I notice the thought of boredom, but I am not boredom." From this clarity, new behavioral responses become possible. This teaching integrates modern cognitive-behavioral approaches—changing thoughts changes behaviors—with Patanjali's deeper insight that awareness itself is transformative. Dissolving the vritti eliminates the mental conditions that perpetuate habits, enabling authentic behavior change at the root.
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