The capacity to distinguish between real threats and mental projections, fundamental to Patanjali's teaching on freeing oneself from anxiety patterns.
Viveka—discriminative wisdom or discernment—enables practitioners to distinguish between actual danger and anxious mental fabrication. The anxious mind constantly projects catastrophic futures and misinterprets neutral stimuli as threats. Viveka develops the ability to observe a thought like "I'm going to fail" and recognize it as a mental pattern rather than truth. Patanjali teaches that liberation requires directly perceiving the difference between purusha (eternal conscious witness) and prakriti (mental and physical manifestations). Applied to anxiety, viveka is recognizing "I am not my anxious thoughts; I am the awareness observing them." This subtle but radical shift undermines anxiety's power. Through meditation practice, individuals develop the capacity to watch anxious narratives arise and pass without believing them or reacting to them. Viveka transforms anxiety from an identity ("I am anxious") to a passing mental event. This discrimination is both philosophical insight and practical skill, cultivated systematically through Patanjali's yoga path.
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