Patanjali's concept of vasana (conditioning impressions) explains how addiction becomes deeply encoded and how new patterns can be inscribed.
Vasana refers to subtle conditioning impressions or psychological grooves created by repeated experiences—essentially the Yogic understanding of neural plasticity and habit formation. Addiction represents deeply etched vasana: years of substance use or compulsive behavior create powerful neural pathways and conditioned associations. A stimulus—stress, social situation, emotional state—automatically activates the addictive response through vasana-level conditioning. However, Patanjali's framework also offers hope: vasana can be redirected through consistent new practice. Just as addiction carved grooves through repetition, recovery creates new grooves through deliberate practice of healthy responses. This aligns perfectly with modern habit neuroscience: the brain can form new pathways through sustained repetition and environmental redesign. Patanjali's teaching suggests recovery isn't about eliminating old vasana but about creating more powerful new ones—building stronger, deeper grooves toward health, connection, and meaning that can override addiction's conditioned patterns.
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