Patanjali's dharana (concentration) as the deliberate focusing of attention on a single part to establish contact and understanding.
Dharana, the sixth limb of Patanjali's yoga, is the practice of holding attention steadily on a single point—traditionally a mantra, breath, or image. In Internal Family Systems, dharana becomes the skill of focusing your complete attention on one part at a time, establishing a genuine connection. Many people try to work with their entire internal system at once, which creates confusion and overwhelm. Dharana teaches that transformation comes through sustained focus. When you identify that a Protector part is active, you practice dharana by turning your full attention inward and asking: What are you protecting me from? What do you believe about me? What do you need me to know? This concentrated attention allows the part to feel genuinely witnessed, which is often the first step in its transformation. Through dharana, you develop the capacity to sit with a part's discomfort, fear, or anger without distraction or withdrawal. You learn what it feels like, where it lives in your body, what stories it tells, and what protective function it serves. This focused awareness is the gateway to genuine dialogue and change.
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