The mental fluctuations and thought patterns that distort political perception and decision-making, requiring disciplined observation to recognize bias.
Patanjali's concept of citta vritti—the fluctuations of consciousness—directly applies to political psychology by revealing how our minds distort reality through emotional reactivity, prejudice, and conditioned patterns. In political contexts, these mental fluctuations manifest as tribal thinking, confirmation bias, and reactive judgment of opposing viewpoints. By cultivating the yogic practice of witness consciousness, political actors can observe their own mental patterns without being controlled by them. This creates space for rational deliberation and authentic dialogue across ideological divides. Understanding that political disagreement often stems from mental fluctuation rather than pure disagreement on facts allows leaders and citizens to respond with greater wisdom. The discipline to recognize and manage citta vritti transforms political discourse from reactive conflict into conscious engagement with complexity.
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