Understanding how trauma creates repetitive thought patterns (vritti) and using Patanjali's framework to interrupt obsessive loops and restore mental clarity.
Patanjali defines vritti as the fluctuations or whirlpools of the mind—patterns of thought that create mental turbulence. Trauma survivors know this intimately: intrusive memories, catastrophic predictions, and shame-based rumination create vritti that feel inescapable. The Yoga Sutras propose that these patterns can be observed, named, and gradually stilled through practice rather than force. For PTSD treatment, recognizing vritti as observable mental patterns—not truth—is transformative. A survivor might notice the vritti of "I will never be safe" arising repeatedly, then practice observing it without believing or fighting it. Patanjali's approach differs from suppression: it teaches witnessing. Through pranayama, meditation, and philosophical inquiry, these mental vortices lose their compulsive power. As the mind stabilizes, trauma processing becomes possible, and new neural pathways replace the old repetitive grooves of fear.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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