Cessation of mental fluctuations as a direct means of breaking the feedback loop between anxious thoughts and vagal dysregulation.
Patanjali defines yoga as 'chitta vritti nirodhah'—the cessation of mental modifications or thought patterns. This is not merely philosophical abstraction but a practical intervention into the thought-somatic feedback loop that perpetuates vagal dysregulation. When the nervous system detects threat (real or imagined), it generates loops of anxious thinking; these thoughts then reinforce the sympathetic or dorsal vagal state through bottom-up processing. By cultivating the capacity to interrupt mental fluctuations—through concentration, meditation, or deliberate mental redirection—practitioners break this cycle at the psychological level. This creates space for the vagus nerve to recalibrate. Vritti-nirodhah offers a psychological lever for what polyvagal theory addresses somatically: when the mind becomes still, the nervous system naturally gravitates toward ventral vagal safety, social engagement, and clarity. The practice validates that mental discipline is nervous system regulation.
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