The progressive concentration and meditative absorption practices that develop unshakeable mental focus and emotional equanimity essential for sustained psychological health.
Patanjali's progression from dharana (concentration) to dhyana (meditation) to samadhi (absorption) mirrors the deepening of neurological coherence and psychological integration. Dharana—fixing attention on a single point—directly counteracts the fragmented attention that characterizes modern stress and mental disturbance. In Ayurvedic terms, this stabilizes vata, focuses scattered consciousness, and builds the ojas reserves necessary for sustained wellness. As dharana matures into dhyana, the effort dissolves and a natural absorption emerges—the mind becomes so merged with its object that subject-object duality dissolves. This state profoundly resets the nervous system, reduces cortisol, and restores parasympathetic tone. Psychologically, dhyana creates the witness consciousness essential to Ayurvedic healing—the ability to observe mental patterns without identification or reactivity. By systematically training attention through these limbs, practitioners develop psychological resilience that no external circumstance can shake. This cultivated capacity to remain mentally present and unshaken becomes the ultimate prevention of mental disease and the foundation of lasting peace, clarity, and psychological freedom.
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