The Art of the Mental Scrub: Wisdom from a 1970s Yoga Classic
The Art of the Mental Scrub: Wisdom from a 1970s Yoga Classic There is a specific kind of magic found in the "analog" wisdom of the 1970s. Long before we had apps to track our heart rate variability or high-resolution streaming classes, there was a generation of pioneers like Richard Hittleman. His work, particularly in classics like Yoga for Personal Living , offered something that feels remarkably urgent today: a practical, no-nonsense manual for mental reprogramming . One of the most profound techniques shared in that era wasn’t about touching your toes—it was about touching your past. Confronting the "Negative Recording" Hittleman’s approach was grounded in a concept that feels like a precursor to modern cognitive behavioral therapy. He viewed the mind as a storage device, playing "recordings" of past experiences, failures, and anxieties on a loop. These recordings form our "past identity"—a version of ourselves built on old data t...