Ekagrata (one-pointed concentration) develops the capacity for undivided presence that secure attachment requires.
Ekagrata, meaning one-pointed or singular focus, emerges from Patanjali's practice of concentration (dharana). This principle addresses a subtle but profound attachment challenge: the inability to be fully present with a partner. Anxiously attached individuals often dissociate into worry about the relationship's future or obsessive replaying of interactions. Avoidant individuals intellectualize or distance mentally even while physically present. Neither pattern allows genuine intimacy, which requires undivided attention and presence. Ekagrata cultivates the capacity to place complete attention on the present moment and the person before you without mental fragmentation or distraction. This is not forced concentration but rather natural focusing of awareness when the mind is calm and grounded. Through meditation and mindfulness practices, individuals develop the neurological capacity for sustained focus that formerly scattered attention. In relationships, this manifests as genuine listening—truly hearing a partner without planning your response or judging their words. Secure attachment research confirms that feeling deeply seen and heard by a partner creates profound healing. Patanjali's ekagrata provides both the philosophical framework and practical methodology for developing this capacity, transforming distracted, partial presence into the whole-person attention that intimate connection requires.
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