Patanjali's concept of vritti (mental fluctuations) explains how attachment patterns arise from unconscious mental habits that can be observed and transformed through awareness.
In Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, vritti refers to the modifications or fluctuations of the mind that create suffering. Attachment patterns emerge from these unconscious mental habits—the mind's tendency to grasp, cling, and create narratives around relationships. By recognizing vritti as observable phenomena rather than fixed truths, we gain the power to interrupt reactive attachment cycles. This Sophos tradition teaches that insecure attachment often manifests as specific mental patterns: anxious rumination, avoidant dissociation, or ambivalent oscillation. Through systematic observation of these mental modifications, practitioners develop the capacity to witness their attachment responses without being controlled by them. This foundational concept bridges neuroscience and ancient wisdom, showing how awareness precedes change in relational patterns.
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