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In this solo episode, Amy returns to one of the heart-teachings of Patañjali’s Yoga Sūtra: learning to observe the fluctuations of mind and how they shape behavior, communication, and the way we show up in relationship and daily life. Rather than analyzing or diagnosing, she frames this as svādhyāya—steady self-reflection rooted in classical yoga philosophy.
Amy walks listeners through Vyāsa’s five states of mind (citta-bhūmi)—from restlessness and dullness to one-pointed focus and absorption—and then explores how a meditation practice naturally moves beyond surface thoughts into the deeper layers of experience: vijñānamaya kośa (discernment, beliefs, identity patterns) and ānandamaya kośa (inner coherence, ease, meaning, and trust).
She also introduces contemplative inquiry through vāsanā (habitual tendencies), saṃskāra (deep patterning), and the kleśas (root causes of suffering)—not as labels, but as invitations to notice what is repeating and to support wise change over time.
In the final section, Amy shares an emerging project: a Yoga Philosophy Self-Reflection Coach—a custom AI-based chat tool designed to support brief, titrated self-inquiry and help people choose a targeted meditation practice in small daily doses. She addresses common concerns about mixing yoga and technology, emphasizes that human connection still matters, and offers thoughtful privacy guidance.
In This Episode, You’ll Hear
A Few Reflective Questions to Take into Practice
Mentioned Resource
Amy shares that listeners who want to beta test the Yoga Philosophy Self-Reflection Coach can contact her through her website: www.theoptimalstate.com.
Gentle Reminder
This episode offers philosophical self-inquiry grounded in yoga tradition. It is not presented as diagnosis or mental health treatment. If you need more support, consider working with a qualified yoga therapist and/or licensed mental health professional.
By Amy Wheeler4.9
5353 ratings
In this solo episode, Amy returns to one of the heart-teachings of Patañjali’s Yoga Sūtra: learning to observe the fluctuations of mind and how they shape behavior, communication, and the way we show up in relationship and daily life. Rather than analyzing or diagnosing, she frames this as svādhyāya—steady self-reflection rooted in classical yoga philosophy.
Amy walks listeners through Vyāsa’s five states of mind (citta-bhūmi)—from restlessness and dullness to one-pointed focus and absorption—and then explores how a meditation practice naturally moves beyond surface thoughts into the deeper layers of experience: vijñānamaya kośa (discernment, beliefs, identity patterns) and ānandamaya kośa (inner coherence, ease, meaning, and trust).
She also introduces contemplative inquiry through vāsanā (habitual tendencies), saṃskāra (deep patterning), and the kleśas (root causes of suffering)—not as labels, but as invitations to notice what is repeating and to support wise change over time.
In the final section, Amy shares an emerging project: a Yoga Philosophy Self-Reflection Coach—a custom AI-based chat tool designed to support brief, titrated self-inquiry and help people choose a targeted meditation practice in small daily doses. She addresses common concerns about mixing yoga and technology, emphasizes that human connection still matters, and offers thoughtful privacy guidance.
In This Episode, You’ll Hear
A Few Reflective Questions to Take into Practice
Mentioned Resource
Amy shares that listeners who want to beta test the Yoga Philosophy Self-Reflection Coach can contact her through her website: www.theoptimalstate.com.
Gentle Reminder
This episode offers philosophical self-inquiry grounded in yoga tradition. It is not presented as diagnosis or mental health treatment. If you need more support, consider working with a qualified yoga therapist and/or licensed mental health professional.

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