Sustained, intentional practice that develops stable political virtues and overcomes ingrained patterns of disconnection or cynicism.
Patanjali emphasizes that transformation requires abhyasa—disciplined, repetitive practice over time. Political psychology often observes that citizens become cynical or disengaged through accumulated negative experiences. Abhyasa reverses this through structured commitment to constructive civic practices: attending local meetings, learning policy details, engaging respectfully with opposing views. Like meditation practice, political abhyasa builds neural pathways toward wisdom and virtue. A person who practices informed voting, reads diverse sources, and regularly engages in dialogue gradually rewires their political consciousness. This framework rejects both naive optimism and learned helplessness, instead offering a practical path to genuine political maturation. Abhyasa acknowledges that political wisdom isn't innate but cultivated through disciplined, repeated engagement with political reality and one's own reactive patterns.
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