MICROVITA AND MENTAL WELLNESS: A HOLISTIC CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK FOR SUBTLE INFLUENCES ON COGNITION, EMOTION, AND COLLECTIVE WELL-BEING
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.69889/ijlapt.v1i1(May).153Keywords:
Microvita; Mental Wellness; Subtle Energy; Consciousness; Positive Microvita; Negative Microvita; Psychosomatic Health; Holistic Mental Health; Mind–Body Interaction; Psychological Resilience.Abstract
Mental wellness has emerged as one of the most critical components of public health and human development in the twenty-first century. As global societies confront rising levels of stress, anxiety, depression, and psychological fragmentation, there is a growing interest in integrative frameworks that explore the role of subtle influences on mental states. Microvita, a concept introduced by the Indian philosopher P.R. Sarkar in 1986, presents a unique and largely unexplored paradigm that links subtle micro-energetic entities with physical, mental, and spiritual well-being. This research paper offers an extensive, humanised exploration of Microvita theory and its potential relevance to contemporary mental wellness. Drawing on interdisciplinary perspectives from psychology, neuroscience, energy medicine, consciousness studies, holistic health, and Indian philosophical traditions, the paper conceptualises mental wellness as an emergent property shaped by both material and subtle forces. The study further analyses positive and negative Microvita as metaphorical or theoretical constructs influencing emotional resilience, cognitive processing, behavioural regulation, and environmental mental ecology. The paper also reviews existing literature on mind-body interaction, psychosomatic pathways, meditation science, and collective consciousness to establish conceptual bridges between Microvita theory and evidence-based mental health frameworks. Additionally, a Microvita-informed mental wellness model is proposed to integrate subtle energetic influences with biopsychosocial determinants. The discussion highlights the strengths, limitations, and future potential of incorporating Microvita into academic discourse, emphasising its value as a philosophical, heuristic, and possibly practical tool for understanding human psychological flourishing. The paper concludes by encouraging interdisciplinary research, particularly in the context of preventive mental health, ageing populations, and community mental well-being.
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