The practice of observing thoughts and distortions from an inner witness perspective rather than identifying with them, creating transformative psychological distance.
Sakshi bhava—the state of being a witness—is a powerful perceptual shift for working with cognitive distortions. Rather than being consumed by a distorted thought ("I am a failure"), you learn to observe it: "A thought of failure is arising." This subtle distinction removes your identity from the distortion and creates space for choice. Patanjali's yoga system culminates in this witness consciousness, where you observe mental fluctuations without identifying with them. This practice has profound psychological implications: distortions lose their binding power when you're not fused with them. The witness sees thoughts, emotions, and patterns with equanimity—neither rejecting nor accepting, just observing. Over time, this witnessing weakens the emotional charge attached to distortions. You notice catastrophic thoughts arising but don't believe them because you're not identified as the thinker. This consciousness is cultivated through meditation and mindfulness practices that strengthen your capacity to observe inner experience without judgment or ownership.
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