The yogic practice of concentrating attention, which builds the mental capacity required to interrupt automatic habits and sustain intentional behavior.
Dharana, the sixth limb of yoga, means "concentration" or "focused attention." It's the deliberate practice of directing and stabilizing attention on a single object—breath, mantra, visual point—for extended periods. This seemingly simple practice is foundational to all behavior change. Most people fail at habit formation because their attention is fragmented and weak; they cannot maintain focus on new behaviors amid environmental distractions and internal impulses. Dharana directly strengthens your capacity for sustained attention, which translates directly to habit change. When you practice dharana through meditation or focused practice, you're literally exercising your attention muscle. This builds prefrontal cortex activation and reduces default-mode network dominance (the wandering, reactive mind). With stronger attention capacity, you can catch impulses before they become actions, maintain focus on your new behavior despite discomfort, and resist environmental triggers more effectively. Dharana recognizes that attention is a trainable skill, not a fixed capacity. By practicing concentration regularly, you develop the mental strength to choose new behaviors even when old habits feel automatic and irresistible.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.