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Concept
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Citta Vrtti Nirodhah: Quieting Mental Fluctuation

Patanjali's definition of yoga as stilling mental patterns, addressing the psychological turbulence that disrupts habit maintenance.

Patan
Why It Matters

Citta vrtti nirodhah—"the stilling of mental fluctuations"—is Patanjali's foundational definition of yoga itself. The citta (mind-field) naturally generates vrtti (fluctuations): thoughts, doubts, anxieties, fantasies, and conflicting desires. These mental patterns create the psychological noise that derails habits. Every time you feel ambivalent about continuing a new behavior—"Should I exercise or rest?" "Is this meditation working?"—vrtti are active, generating doubt and decision-fatigue. Patanjali's teaching directly addresses this: the goal isn't to eliminate mental activity but to reduce unnecessary fluctuations that consume energy and disrupt focus. For habit formation, this means developing meditative capacity to observe thoughts without being swept away by them. When cravings arise (vrtti), you notice them without automatic reaction. When doubt surfaces, you acknowledge it without letting it derail your practice. Through consistent meditation and mindfulness practices drawn from the yogic tradition, the mind gradually stabilizes. This internal stillness makes maintaining habits exponentially easier because there's less internal conflict and second-guessing. The executive function becomes clearer, more decisive, and less vulnerable to the psychological turbulence that normally triggers relapse.

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