Patanjali's eighth limb represents unified consciousness where insights integrate fully; CBT's goal of automatized healthy thinking parallels this transformative integration.
Samadhi, the eighth and ultimate limb, describes complete absorption and unified consciousness where the observer, observation, and observed merge into coherent wholeness. In CBT terms, this mirrors the goal of cognitive integration: when new thinking patterns become automatic, when behavioral changes feel natural rather than effortful, when insights permeate daily life. Early CBT work requires conscious effort—actively disputing thoughts, deliberately practicing exposures, systematically completing thought records. But transformation culminates in samadhi-like integration where healthier cognitions and behaviors function spontaneously. The anxious client eventually approaches feared situations without conscious technique; the depressed client naturally engages in values-aligned activity without forced motivation. Patanjali's framework validates this integration process as the ultimate therapeutic aim, not mere symptom reduction. Samadhi suggests that genuine healing involves unified reorganization of consciousness—cognitive, emotional, and behavioral alignment. This philosophical perspective inspires deeper commitment to CBT work, positioning it as transformative integration rather than mere symptom management.
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