Vritti are the mental fluctuations and thought patterns that color our perception and beliefs, showing how our minds actively construct our worldview rather than passively receive it.
In Patanjali's framework, vritti (mental modifications) are the fundamental patterns through which consciousness experiences reality. These thought patterns act as filters, distorting what we perceive based on our conditioning, past experiences, and habitual tendencies. Understanding vritti reveals why two people witnessing the same event develop entirely different beliefs about it. Each belief isn't objective fact but rather a vritti—a mental ripple shaped by our psychological conditioning. By recognizing these patterns, we gain the power to question their accuracy and change them. Patanjali's yoga practice targets precisely this: observing vritti without judgment, gradually loosening their grip on our consciousness. This ancient insight directly addresses belief formation: our beliefs aren't truths we discover, but patterns we create through repeated mental activity. By becoming aware of our vritti, we can choose which thought patterns to strengthen and which to release, fundamentally transforming our belief systems from the ground up.
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