Sakshibhava is the capacity to observe thoughts as a neutral witness rather than identifying with them; this creates the distance needed to challenge distortions.
Sakshibhava, or witness consciousness, is the ability to observe your thoughts, emotions, and mental patterns from a position of detachment rather than identification. In Patanjali's framework, the witness (sakshi) is the unchanging consciousness that observes all mental modifications without being contaminated by them. This is transformative for cognitive distortions because distortions gain power through identification—we believe them as truth. When you develop sakshibhava, you step back and notice: 'I am having the thought that I'm a failure' rather than 'I am a failure.' This subtle shift dismantles the distortion's authority. Cognitive therapy calls this metacognition or defusion. Patanjali teaches that this witness perspective is our natural state, obscured by habit. Through meditation and mindfulness practice, sakshibhava naturally emerges, creating psychological freedom. Distorted thoughts continue arising, but they lose their power to determine your identity and future.
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