Patanjali's samadhi describes integrated consciousness where observer and observed merge, representing the cognitive flexibility and psychological integration CBT develops.
Samadhi, the ultimate state in Patanjali's system, transcends the subject-object duality and represents complete integration of consciousness. While often misunderstood as trance-like absorption, samadhi actually describes a state of extraordinary clarity and flexibility where the practitioner fluidly adapts to reality without rigid filters. In psychological terms, this mirrors CBT's goal: developing such flexibility that thoughts arise without capturing attention, emotions fluctuate without triggering rigid responses, and situations are met with clear, adaptive cognition rather than defensive distortion. Samadhi represents the antithesis of rumination, catastrophizing, or cognitive fusion—the mental patterns CBT addresses. The integrated awareness of samadhi suggests psychological health as flexible responsiveness rather than symptom elimination. This concept enriches CBT by framing mental health not merely as reduced distress but as enhanced cognitive flexibility, adaptive capacity, and the ability to engage with thoughts and feelings without entanglement, aligning with third-wave CBT approaches emphasizing acceptance and psychological flexibility over pure symptom control.
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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