Patanjali's concept of mental fluctuations (vritti) reveals how attachment patterns are formed through repetitive thought cycles that condition our relational responses.
In Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, vritti refers to the mental modifications or fluctuations of consciousness that create habitual patterns. Applied to attachment theory, vritti illuminates how early relational experiences create neural grooves—repetitive mental patterns that automatically trigger specific attachment behaviors. When a child experiences inconsistent caregiving, their mind develops vritti patterns of anxious vigilance or avoidant detachment. These mental fluctuations become self-perpetuating cycles that continue into adulthood. Through Patanjali's framework, understanding attachment styles becomes understanding dominant vritti patterns. The practice of witnessing these patterns without judgment—rather than being controlled by them—creates space for transformation. By recognizing attachment responses as vritti rather than identity, individuals gain the psychological distance necessary to choose different relational patterns. This Yogic perspective complements modern attachment research by offering a mechanism for understanding how patterns become automatic and how awareness itself becomes the first step toward secure relating.
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