Patanjali's concept of mental fluctuations reframed as ancestral patterns stored in consciousness, central to understanding intergenerational trauma in African healing.
In Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, chittha vritti—the fluctuations and modifications of mind—describes how consciousness becomes disturbed by impressions and patterns. African healing traditions recognize that mental distress often carries ancestral weight: unresolved griefs, collective traumas, and inherited burdens embedded in psychological layers. By viewing chittha vritti through this lens, practitioners understand that individual mental distress is not isolated but connected to lineage wounds. This framework validates the African healing emphasis on ancestral acknowledgment and resolution. Recognizing these ancestral mental patterns as vritti allows individuals to work with them consciously rather than being unconsciously controlled by them, enabling healing that honors both personal psychology and cultural continuity.
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