Deliberate recollection of stable principles, past resilience, and wisdom to ground present-moment awareness during anxious activation.
Smarana means remembrance or recollection, a practice of deliberately bringing to mind stabilizing truths, past experiences of resilience, or spiritual principles during moments of disturbance. When anxiety hijacks cognition, the mind contracts to catastrophic predictions and threat-focused thoughts; smarana interrupts this by anchoring awareness in stabilizing memory. In Patanjali's system, recalling the nature of mind, the impermanence of mental states, or one's own capacity to practice serves as an anxiety interrupt. Applied practically: when panic arises, deliberately recalling 'I have felt this before and survived,' 'This is a mental pattern, not a fact,' or 'My breath can calm me' redirects the nervous system toward coherence. This mirrors modern techniques like grounding statements and positive memory recall in cognitive-behavioral therapy. Smarana acknowledges that anxiety's distortions are temporary and that the remembering mind—capable of accessing wisdom, perspective, and evidence-based truth—is always accessible. Regular cultivation of smarana in calm moments creates neural pathways that activate during crisis, providing anxiety sufferers with reliable inner resources.
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