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Concept
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Chitta Vritti Nirodhah: Mental Pattern Recognition

The yogic principle of stilling mental fluctuations directly parallels CBT's core work of identifying and interrupting automatic thought patterns.

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Why It Matters

Patanjali's foundational aphorism 'yogash chitta vritti nirodhah' teaches that yoga is the cessation of mental modifications. This ancient framework remarkably aligns with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy's fundamental premise: our suffering stems from distorted thought patterns, not circumstances themselves. In CBT practice, therapists help clients recognize when their 'chitta vritti'—automatic thoughts, worries, and mental loops—hijack perception and behavior. By cultivating witness consciousness, as yoga teaches, individuals observe thoughts without identification, creating space for cognitive restructuring. This non-reactive observation is essential for CBT's cognitive defusion techniques. Patanjali's systematic approach to mental discipline provides a philosophical foundation explaining why CBT's thought-monitoring exercises work: they retrain the mind's fundamental operating system, gradually reducing the involuntary chatter that perpetuates anxiety, depression, and maladaptive patterns.

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Mental Health
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