Patanjali's ultimate state of unified absorption reframes neurodivergent hyperfocus as a natural gateway to deep concentration and psychological wholeness rather than a deficit.
Samadhi—the eighth and culminating limb of yoga, where mind and object merge in unified absorption—describes profound meditative states most people must cultivate laboriously. Yet neurodivergent individuals, particularly those with ADHD and autism, experience naturally-occurring hyperfocus: periods of complete absorption in intrinsically motivating activities where self-consciousness dissolves and time becomes irrelevant. Patanjali's framework suggests this isn't pathology but a glimpse of the mind's highest capability. Reframing hyperfocus through samadhi transforms it from "losing track of time" (deficit language) into recognizing a genuine capacity for absorption and presence. This perspective validates the neurodivergent experience while offering a contemplative context for understanding flow states. Rather than suppressing hyperfocus, neurodivergent individuals can honor it as evidence of their minds' natural aptitude for deep concentration. Applied wisely—directing hyperfocus toward meaningful pursuits—this neurodivergent trait becomes a spiritual and practical strength, a shortcut to the unified awareness Patanjali identifies as yoga's ultimate fruit.
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