Patanjali's samadhi—absorbed mental unity—describes the goal state where cognitive change becomes fully integrated, automatic, and no longer effortful.
Samadhi, often translated as 'absorption' or 'enlightenment,' describes a state of unified consciousness where the observer, observation, and object merge. While this ultimate mystical state transcends CBT's scope, the principle illuminates therapy's deepest goal: genuine integration. Early CBT work feels effortful—consciously catching thoughts, reviewing evidence, completing worksheets. But sustained practice creates samadhi-like integration where healthier cognition becomes automatic. A client initially struggling with perfectionism through deliberate thought-challenging eventually naturally adopts realistic standards without conscious effort. The corrected thinking becomes embodied wisdom rather than intellectual exercise. Patanjali understood that true mastery transcends technique; it becomes natural expression. CBT therapists recognize this when clients report, 'I don't think about it anymore—I just automatically respond differently.' This integration represents successful therapy. By framing CBT homework as preparation for samadhi—the natural flowering of authentic mental function—practitioners honor both the technique and its ultimate purpose. The goal isn't perpetual thought-monitoring but achieving mental freedom where healthy cognition flows naturally without constant effort.
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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