Patanjali's culmination state of unified consciousness illuminates CBT's goal of integrated psychological functioning where thoughts, emotions, and actions align coherently.
Samadhi represents the apex of Patanjali's system—a state of integrated, non-dual consciousness where the observer, observation, and observed merge into unified functioning. While samadhi appears transcendent, it directly relates to CBT's practical goal: integrated psychological functioning where thoughts, emotions, behaviors, and values operate cohesively rather than in conflict. A person in samadhi-like states—what modern psychology calls flow—experiences absence of internal struggle, clear perception, and aligned action. CBT recognizes that psychological suffering often stems from fragmentation: thoughts contradicting values, emotions overwhelming rational assessment, behaviors inconsistent with intentions. Through systematic cognitive and behavioral work, CBT progressively integrates these aspects. Patanjali's framework suggests this integration is not merely symptom relief but a genuine reorganization of consciousness toward wholeness. CBT practitioners who understand samadhi recognize their work's deeper purpose: not managing dysfunction but facilitating integrated, coherent psychological functioning where mind, emotion, and action flow seamlessly together in purposeful alignment.
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