This foundational definition of yoga as the stilling of mental fluctuations reveals how belief transformation occurs through quieting rather than fighting the mind.
Citta vritti nirodhah, Patanjali's famous definition of yoga as "the cessation of mental fluctuations," holds profound implications for belief transformation. Rather than attempting to argue ourselves out of false beliefs, this principle suggests that beliefs quieten and transform when mental agitation itself subsides. In the noisy, fluctuating mind, beliefs dominate our perception and seem immovable. But when the citta (consciousness) becomes still through practice, the space between thoughts expands and beliefs lose their grip. We discover we are not our beliefs. From this quiet state, beliefs can be examined with detachment and perspective. Without identifying with them, we can let go of those that no longer serve. New beliefs can then form from clarity rather than reactivity. This approach is radically different from cognitive therapy that fights belief with counterargument. Patanjali's way works through consciousness itself—by quieting the mental field, beliefs naturally reorganize. This is why meditation is the cornerstone of transformative belief work in this tradition.
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