Dharana is focused concentration; drishti is a visual gaze point that anchors scattered attention and stabilizes the traumatized mind.
Patanjali's sixth limb, dharana, develops the capacity to hold attention on a single point despite mental turbulence. Trauma fragments attention—the mind scatters across threat-scanning, intrusive memories, and future fears. Dharana training directly counteracts this fragmentation. Drishti, the focused gaze point used in yoga practice, provides a literal anchor for attention when the mind feels unsafe and unmoored. For trauma survivors, this simple practice—maintaining steady gaze on a candle flame, a mantra, or breath sensation—builds concrete neural pathways of stability. Dharana is not suppression but purposeful direction of consciousness. As practitioners strengthen dharana, intrusive thoughts lose power because attention no longer automatically follows their pull. This is neurologically sound: the brain cannot simultaneously panic and maintain concentrated focus. Regular dharana practice gradually retrains attention patterns, moving the mind from reactive scanning to intentional presence, creating genuine psychological safety through controlled, embodied focus.
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