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Smrti: Mindfulness as Cognitive Anchoring

Smrti (mindfulness) in Abhidharma is the faculty of continuous remembering and anchoring awareness in present reality, preventing mental drift and distortion.

Patan
Why It Matters

Smrti (mindfulness or remembering) in Abhidharma psychology functions as the essential mental faculty that holds awareness steady, preventing habitual distraction and keeping consciousness anchored in direct experience. Unlike passive observation, smrti is active and engaged—continuously returning attention to what is actually present while undoing the mind's tendency to drift into fantasy, rumination, or false interpretation. Patanjali identifies smrti as central to yoga practice, the capacity to remember the truth of what you're observing without the interference of conditioning. In Abhidharma analysis, smrti works synergistically with discrimination (prajna) to progressively expose and correct misconceptions about reality. This psychology shows that most suffering derives not from experience itself but from how the mind relates to experience through habitual interpretation. Smrti prevents this distorting overlay by repeatedly anchoring consciousness in bare perception: sensation without judgment, emotion without narrative, thought without identification. The Abhidharma framework reveals that sustained smrti gradually weakens the klesha-driven patterns that generate suffering. Through continuous practice, smrti becomes more refined and natural, transforming consciousness into a clear mirror reflecting reality accurately rather than through the lens of ignorance, craving, and aversion.

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