Patanjali's principle of stilling mental fluctuations offers a direct pathway to interrupt the recurring thought loops and intrusive memories characteristic of C-PTSD.
Chitta vritti nirodhah—the cessation of mental modifications—forms the foundation of Patanjali's yoga philosophy. In C-PTSD, the mind becomes trapped in recursive patterns: flashbacks, rumination, and hypervigilant cognition create a feedback loop that perpetuates trauma. Patanjali teaches that these vrittis (thought-waves) are not truth but conditioned patterns. By systematically observing and disidentifying from these fluctuations through pranayama and meditation, the practitioner creates psychological space between stimulus and response. This is not suppression but conscious witnessing. For trauma survivors, this framework validates that intrusive thoughts are mental formations, not reality, and that mastery over the mind is possible through sustained, systematic practice rather than willpower alone.
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