Patanjali's concentration and meditation practices directly retrain attentional systems dysregulated by addiction, restoring cognitive control.
Dharana (concentration) and dhyana (meditative flow) represent the progressive refinement of attention—the direct antidote to addiction's hijacking of attentional resources. Addiction captures attention through urgency and reward salience; the addicted brain becomes hyperfocused on obtaining the substance or behavior while neglecting other life domains. Patanjali's systematic attention training builds the neurological capacity to direct focus deliberately rather than reactively. Modern neuroscience confirms this: meditation strengthens prefrontal cortex function and reduces reactivity in reward circuits. Dharana develops sustained attention through practices like breath focus; dhyana deepens into effortless focus. For addiction recovery, these practices restore cognitive flexibility and allow individuals to direct attention toward valued life areas rather than toward craving. The graduated progression from forced concentration to natural meditative absorption mirrors recovery: initially effortful vigilance gradually transitions into integrated awareness where healthy choices become natural.
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