The yogic goal of unified absorption (samadhi) parallels ADHD hyperfocus; learning to recognize, cultivate, and direct this natural state toward meaningful activities.
Samadhi, the final limb of yoga, describes a state of profound absorption where subject and object merge—complete, unforced concentration on a single point. Remarkably, this mirrors ADHD hyperfocus: the intense, sustained attention that emerges when something genuinely captivates you. Rather than viewing hyperfocus as a symptom to eliminate, Patanjali's framework celebrates it as a natural capacity worth understanding and directing intentionally. The key difference: samadhi is chosen and cultivated, while ADHD hyperfocus often hijacks attention unexpectedly. By studying what naturally draws your deep focus—your authentic interests, values, and strengths—you can architect work and life around these natural pull states. This isn't laziness; it's working with your neurology rather than against it. Samadhi teaches that deep absorption is a trainable state. For ADHD, this means identifying activities that naturally generate flow, protecting time for them, and using them as anchors for discipline and purpose, transforming a perceived weakness into an exceptional capacity.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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