Developing one-pointed concentration to overcome dissociation and fragmentation, strengthening the ability to remain present in the body and moment.
Ekagrata—single-pointed focus or concentration—is a core practice in Patanjali's path. Trauma survivors often experience dissociation: attention fragmenting, consciousness splitting from body, awareness narrowing or scattering as survival strategy. Ekagrata directly addresses this by training the mind to stabilize on a single object—breath, mantra, visual point—with progressive steadiness. This practice rebuilds the traumatized nervous system's capacity for coherence and presence. Initially practiced for brief moments, ekagrata gradually extends, teaching the mind how to inhabit one focus rather than scatter into rumination or dissociation. For trauma survivors, this restored capacity for attention translates to embodiment: the ability to stay present in the body, maintain eye contact, engage in conversation without internal fragmentation. Ekagrata is not forced concentration but gentle, persistent training that progressively heals the dissociative splits created by overwhelming experience.
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