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Concept
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Dharana to Dhyana: Sustained Attention and Flow

Patanjali's progression from dharana (focused concentration) to dhyana (unbroken flow) trains attention away from anxiety's repetitive loops into absorbed, peaceful engagement.

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Why It Matters

Dharana, concentration on a single object, and dhyana, uninterrupted flow of that concentration, form Patanjali's pathway out of anxiety's circular thinking. Anxiety thrives in fragmented attention—rapid-fire worries with no stable focus. Dharana teaches anchoring consciousness to one point: a mantra, breath sensation, or visual focus. This isn't forced suppression but voluntary redirection. As concentration deepens into dhyana, the boundary between observer and observed dissolves; thinking stops because consciousness becomes completely absorbed. This is the psychological state opposite to anxious rumination. Modern research confirms that flow states (similar to Patanjali's dhyana) are anxiety-incompatible. The practices build attentional capacity systematically. Anxiety weakens focus; these practices strengthen it. Practitioners report not just anxiety reduction but enhanced concentration, creativity, and presence in daily life. By training attention toward constructive engagement, Patanjali's system naturally crowds out the mental space where anxiety flourishes.

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Mental Health
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