The yoga progression from dharana (concentration) to dhyana (meditation) as the deepening practices that stabilize new narratives in consciousness.
Dharana—focused concentration—is the initial practice of directing your attention to your new narrative again and again. Dhyana—meditation or continuous flowing attention—is when that narrative becomes so stabilized that attention rests there effortlessly. Patanjali teaches these as progressive stages in transforming consciousness. In narrative therapy, dharana is deliberate practice: you sit down and consciously rehearse your new story, you speak it aloud, you examine it from different angles. This requires effort; the mind resists and gravitates back to the familiar old narrative. Dhyana emerges when the new story becomes so integrated that you inhabit it naturally, without strain. You wake up and live from the new narrative without constantly having to remind yourself. The progression from dharana to dhyana marks genuine transformation. Applied to story-rewriting, these practices mean beginning with structured, effortful rehearsal (dharana) and patiently allowing your new narrative to become the stable, automatic ground of your being (dhyana). This is how psychology becomes contemplative practice.
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