The eighth limb of yoga representing unified consciousness, the ultimate goal of Ayurvedic mental health where fragmentation dissolves into integrated wholeness.
Samadhi, the final limb of Patanjali's Ashtanga Yoga, describes a state of integrated consciousness where the observer, observation, and observed merge into unified awareness—the ultimate destination of psychological transformation. In Ayurvedic mental health frameworks, samadhi represents complete healing: the integration of fragmented aspects of self that trauma and conditioning have separated. Rather than merely symptom management, samadhi-oriented practice aims at dissolving the root separation between conscious and unconscious mind, between body and spirit, between individual consciousness and universal awareness. This integration naturally eliminates psychological suffering because suffering arises from fragmentation and false separation. While complete samadhi may be rare, practicing toward this state progressively heals the splits and dissociations underlying depression, anxiety, and existential confusion. Ayurvedic protocols that support samadhi—meditation, mantra, ritual, and rasayana herbs—address mental health at the deepest causal level, preventing relapse and creating permanent transformation.
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