Patanjali's concept of unwavering, unified attention directed toward one object—the ultimate goal of yogic practice and mental mastery.
Ekagrata, often translated as "one-pointedness," represents the pinnacle of attentional control in Patanjali's framework. It describes a state where the mind becomes completely unified and absorbed in a single focus point—a mantra, breath, object, or idea—without wavering or fragmentation. This is not forced concentration but a natural emergence of deep engagement. Patanjali positions ekagrata as both a practice and a result: you cultivate it through meditation, and it flowers as your mind matures. Modern attention science validates this ancient insight: the brain's most efficient state occurs when network activity is synchronized toward a single goal. Ekagrata is measurable in cognitive performance—athletes and musicians call this "flow." Unlike multitasking, which fragments neural resources, ekagrata concentrates your brain's full computational power on one task. This produces superior quality work, faster learning, and deeper understanding. Developing ekagrata is not mystical; it's training your attentional systems to stabilize and integrate, creating both performance excellence and mental peace.
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