Citta vritti, the mental fluctuations Patanjali describes, reveals how attachment anxieties create repetitive thought loops that distort relational perception and trigger reactive behavior.
Patanjali defines yoga as "citta vritti nirodhah"—the cessation of mental fluctuations or thought patterns. The Yoga Sutras identify five types of mental modifications: correct knowledge, misperception, imagination, sleep, and memory. In attachment relationships, partners become trapped in repetitive vritti cycles: anxious rumination ("Does he really love me?"), avoidant narratives ("I don't need anyone"), or resentful memories ("She always does this"). These thought patterns feel like truth but are actually mechanical reactions rooted in childhood conditioning and nervous system dysregulation. By developing witness consciousness—the ability to observe these patterns without identifying with them—partners can interrupt the cycle. Someone experiencing anxious attachment might notice: "I'm having the thought that abandonment is coming" rather than believing it as fact. This creates psychological space for choice. Recognizing citta vritti as temporary mental weather rather than reality allows adults to relate from their authentic self rather than their wounded self.
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