Patanjali's highest state of unified consciousness reframes ADHD hyperfocus—often seen as problematic—as genuine absorption worth cultivating intentionally.
Samadhi, the eighth limb of yoga, represents complete absorption where subject and object merge and mental fluctuations cease. Paradoxically, many with ADHD experience hyperfocus—intense, unbreakable concentration on chosen tasks. Rather than pathologizing this as problematic attention dysregulation, Patanjali's samadhi framework recognizes it as genuine yogic absorption. The difference: in hyperfocus, the mind still fluctuates (obsessing, anxious looping), while samadhi involves peaceful unity. Yet ADHD hyperfocus contains seeds of samadhi—the capacity for complete mental engagement. The practice becomes intentionally cultivating this state on chosen activities while developing mindfulness around when hyperfocus serves and when it isolates. Understanding hyperfocus through samadhi reframes it from 'what's wrong with my attention' to 'how can I direct this natural capacity?' This perspective empowers ADHD individuals to work with their neurology: choosing hyperfocus-inducing activities for important tasks, using hyperfocus as meditation practice, and building sustainable engagement rather than fighting attention patterns.
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