Patanjali's concept of vritti (mental modifications) explains how trauma creates repetitive thought patterns that hijack consciousness and perpetuate suffering.
In the Yoga Sutras, Patanjali identifies vritti—the fluctuations and modifications of the mind—as the primary obstacle to clarity and peace. Trauma survivors experience vritti as intrusive thoughts, flashbacks, and ruminating patterns that replay traumatic memories involuntarily. These mental fluctuations create a feedback loop where the mind constantly re-experiences danger even when physically safe. Patanjali's framework reveals that trauma doesn't live in events themselves but in the uncontrolled modifications of consciousness triggered by those events. By recognizing vritti as observable mental patterns rather than truth, survivors can begin to create distance from compulsive traumatic thoughts. This distinction is transformative: the mind becomes witnessable rather than overwhelming. Patanjali's system teaches that mastering vritti through focused attention and systematic practice allows consciousness to stabilize, gradually reducing the intensity and frequency of trauma-based mental loops.
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