Patanjali's concept of stilling mental fluctuations directly parallels CBT's approach to identifying and modifying distorted thought patterns.
Patanjali defines yoga as "citta vritti nirodha"—the cessation of mental fluctuations. This foundational principle aligns remarkably with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy's core mechanism: recognizing that our suffering stems not from events themselves, but from our habitual thought patterns about those events. In CBT, practitioners learn to observe their automatic thoughts without judgment, much like a yogi observes the mind's natural movements. By developing this witnessing capacity, clients can interrupt the cycle of distorted thinking—catastrophizing, black-and-white thinking, personalization—that perpetuates emotional distress. Patanjali's systematic approach to mental discipline provides a philosophical framework validating CBT's empirical findings: when we change how we think about situations, we transform our emotional experience and behavioral responses, creating lasting psychological freedom.
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