Patanjali's concept of mental fluctuations (vritti) directly parallels cognitive distortions in CBT, providing a framework for identifying and observing unhelpful thinking patterns.
Vritti, the fluctuations or modifications of the mind described in Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, are the mental patterns that create suffering. These five categories of vritti—correct knowledge, misconception, imagination, sleep, and memory—map remarkably onto cognitive distortions that CBT targets. By naming these patterns as natural mental movements rather than truths, Patanjali offers a compassionate distance from thought that CBT seeks through cognitive defusion. In practice, recognizing vritti means observing "I am having the thought that I am failing" rather than "I am failing." This ancient framework validates CBT's core insight: our thoughts are mental events, not facts. Patanjali's systematic categorization helps practitioners distinguish between productive thinking and distorted patterns, enabling the deliberate choice of which mental movements to cultivate.
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