Patanjali's samadhi (absorption or unified focus) illuminates CBT's principle of goal-setting and attention management for sustained behavioral and cognitive change.
Samadhi, the eighth limb of yoga, represents unified concentration where subject and object merge in focused attention. While ultimate samadhi is a meditative state, Patanjali's preliminary samadhi principle—focused, unwavering attention on chosen objects—directly parallels CBT's goal-setting and attention management. In CBT, treatment effectiveness depends on clients maintaining focus on specific, measurable goals rather than dispersing attention across vague improvements. Patanjali's framework suggests that wherever attention goes, transformation follows. A client with social anxiety gains power by maintaining focus on the goal "participate in group conversation" rather than the competing goal of "avoid looking foolish." This mirrors CBT's work with goal clarification and values-aligned behavior. Samadhi also informs mindfulness-based CBT applications, where sustained attention to present-moment experience—sensations, thoughts, emotions—creates psychological flexibility. The principle suggests that scattered attention perpetuates psychological suffering, while concentrated focus facilitates change. Samadhi teaches that the quality of attention determines therapeutic outcomes, making attentional training central to CBT practice and homework compliance essential.
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