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Concept
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Dharana: Concentrated Focus on Single Objects

Dharana (concentration) is the yogic discipline of fixing attention on one object; this foundational practice directly strengthens the executive function most challenged by ADHD.

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Why It Matters

Dharana, the sixth limb of Patanjali's Ashtanga yoga, is the practice of concentrating the mind on a single object—a candle flame, mantra, or breath sensation. For ADHD minds accustomed to rapid attention-switching, dharana provides systematic training in voluntary attention direction. Rather than fighting the ADHD brain's natural tendency to scan for novelty, dharana teaches the skill of intentionally returning focus to chosen objects, repeatedly, with patience. Patanjali acknowledges this is difficult; the practice involves noticing when attention wanders and gently redirecting it without frustration. This mirrors modern neuroscience on attention training: the neural circuits strengthened aren't those that prevent distraction, but those that notice it and redirect focus. Starting with brief dharana sessions—one minute focused on breath—builds capacity that transfers to daily tasks. Over time, practitioners develop what neuroscience calls 'metacognitive awareness': the ability to observe and redirect one's own attention, a superpower for ADHD management.

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