
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


One of the most fascinating ideas in Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras is the subtle inner transformation that happens as the mind becomes still.
What Is Nirodha?
Patanjali defines yoga as:
“Yogaś citta-vṛtti-nirodhaḥ” (Yoga Sutra 1.2)
But how do we actually reach that state? It doesn’t happen all at once — it’s a gradual transformation where the restless patterns of thought are replaced by inner stillness.
The Two Competing Tendencies
In Sutra 3.9, Patanjali describes two forces in the mind:
Vyutthāna Saṁskāra: the tendency toward distraction and mental chatter
Nirodha Saṁskāra: the tendency toward silence and restraint
As we meditate and practice, the nirodha-saṁskāras grow stronger, and the vyutthāna-saṁskāras fade away. This shift is called nirodha-pariṇāma, or the transformation toward inner stillness.
The mind doesn’t go silent all at once. It moves through many moments of stillness, where restraint begins to dominate. Over time, these moments string together into a deep, sustained state of peace.
Understanding nirodha-saṁskāra helps us see that meditation isn’t about forcing the mind, but about training it gently, allowing new patterns of stillness to take root. Every time we sit in awareness, we’re imprinting peace into the mind itself.
Yoga is about replacing mental noise with inner clarity. Patanjali’s wisdom reminds us that transformation comes not from struggle, but from consistent practice and subtle inner change.
-
🌟 Stay Connected & Deepen Your Practice
If you’d like to participate in future live sessions, consider joining the Kriya Yoga Online Patreon Community or applying to the Kriya Yoga Apprenticeship Program.
📘 For continued inspiration and instruction, check out Ryan Kurczak’s latest book:
🧘♂️ Your host, Ryan Kurczak, is a Kriya Yoga meditation teacher and author, authorized to teach in 2005 by Roy Eugene Davis, a direct student of Paramahansa Yogananda.
🔗 Explore more resources:
Patreon Community: Support the work & access live sessions
Kriya Yoga Apprenticeship, blog posts & books:
Online Classes for All Levels:
Hundreds of free videos on YouTube:
Thank you for listening, and may your path be filled with clarity, strength, and peace.
By Ryan Kurczak4.9
7070 ratings
One of the most fascinating ideas in Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras is the subtle inner transformation that happens as the mind becomes still.
What Is Nirodha?
Patanjali defines yoga as:
“Yogaś citta-vṛtti-nirodhaḥ” (Yoga Sutra 1.2)
But how do we actually reach that state? It doesn’t happen all at once — it’s a gradual transformation where the restless patterns of thought are replaced by inner stillness.
The Two Competing Tendencies
In Sutra 3.9, Patanjali describes two forces in the mind:
Vyutthāna Saṁskāra: the tendency toward distraction and mental chatter
Nirodha Saṁskāra: the tendency toward silence and restraint
As we meditate and practice, the nirodha-saṁskāras grow stronger, and the vyutthāna-saṁskāras fade away. This shift is called nirodha-pariṇāma, or the transformation toward inner stillness.
The mind doesn’t go silent all at once. It moves through many moments of stillness, where restraint begins to dominate. Over time, these moments string together into a deep, sustained state of peace.
Understanding nirodha-saṁskāra helps us see that meditation isn’t about forcing the mind, but about training it gently, allowing new patterns of stillness to take root. Every time we sit in awareness, we’re imprinting peace into the mind itself.
Yoga is about replacing mental noise with inner clarity. Patanjali’s wisdom reminds us that transformation comes not from struggle, but from consistent practice and subtle inner change.
-
🌟 Stay Connected & Deepen Your Practice
If you’d like to participate in future live sessions, consider joining the Kriya Yoga Online Patreon Community or applying to the Kriya Yoga Apprenticeship Program.
📘 For continued inspiration and instruction, check out Ryan Kurczak’s latest book:
🧘♂️ Your host, Ryan Kurczak, is a Kriya Yoga meditation teacher and author, authorized to teach in 2005 by Roy Eugene Davis, a direct student of Paramahansa Yogananda.
🔗 Explore more resources:
Patreon Community: Support the work & access live sessions
Kriya Yoga Apprenticeship, blog posts & books:
Online Classes for All Levels:
Hundreds of free videos on YouTube:
Thank you for listening, and may your path be filled with clarity, strength, and peace.

572 Listeners

1,862 Listeners

2,604 Listeners

1,471 Listeners

264 Listeners

2,503 Listeners

309 Listeners

244 Listeners

650 Listeners

276 Listeners

12 Listeners

460 Listeners

1,405 Listeners

603 Listeners

36 Listeners