Patanjali's inner limbs of yoga (dharana, dhyana, samadhi) offer trauma survivors a progression from focused attention to integrated wholeness.
Antaranga sadhana refers to the inner limbs of yoga practice—dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), and samadhi (absorption)—which Patanjali considers the core of genuine transformation, distinct from external practices. For trauma survivors, this progression maps a realistic healing pathway. Dharana, concentrated attention, is often where survivors begin: the capacity to focus on a single point (breath, mantra, sensation) for even brief moments is revolutionary for minds scattered by intrusive thoughts and hypervigilance. Dhyana develops as that focus deepens into sustained flow, where attention moves naturally without effortful grasping. Samadhi emerges when the observer, the act of observing, and the observed merge into unified awareness. This progression reflects trauma recovery: initial stabilization through focused practice, deepening into more natural presence, and eventually accessing states of integrated wholeness where the fragmentation caused by trauma dissolves. Patanjali's structure normalizes that these inner limbs develop gradually and sequentially. Survivors don't need to achieve samadhi immediately; they develop concentration first, through persistent practice, knowing the inner work leads toward genuine liberation from trauma's fragmentation.
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