Patanjali's foundational definition of yoga as cessation of mental disturbances, applied directly to reducing psychotic symptom intensity and frequency.
Yoga Sutras 1.2 defines yoga as 'chitta vritti nirodhah'—the cessation or stilling of mental disturbances. While this ultimate goal may seem abstract, it directly addresses psychosis: the core experience is mind overwhelmed by involuntary mental fluctuations—voices, delusions, racing thoughts, and fragmented perceptions that cannot be stilled. Patanjali's systematic approach proposes that through specific practices, these mental disturbances can be progressively reduced. For individuals with schizophrenia and psychosis, this definition reframes recovery as gradually achieving greater mental quietude and stability. Meditation practices, particularly concentration meditation (dharana), cultivate this nirodhah—the ability to settle the mind despite its tendency toward disturbance. This differs from pharmaceutical sedation; rather, it's active cultivation of mental coherence and stability. Modern neuroscience supports this: meditation reduces default mode network hyperactivity implicated in psychotic symptoms. By understanding recovery through Patanjali's lens—progressive stilling of mental disturbances rather than complete symptom elimination—individuals develop realistic, achievable goals: not perfect silence but progressively greater mental quietude, clarity, and agency amidst remaining symptoms.
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