Patanjali's goal of integrated consciousness provides the philosophical endpoint for CBT's integration of cognitive insights into unified functioning.
Samadhi—the state of integrated, unified consciousness where fragmentation dissolves—represents Patanjali's ultimate aim and provides a meaningful frame for understanding CBT's integration work. While CBT rarely uses this language, its therapeutic goal includes helping clients move from fragmented, conflicted functioning toward integrated action aligned with values. Samadhi suggests that when cognitive rigidity, emotional reactivity, and behavioral avoidance are addressed, individuals naturally move toward more unified, coherent functioning. In practical CBT terms, samadhi describes the state where clients have integrated new cognitive skills, achieved behavioral changes, and developed flexible responding—no longer fragmented between what they think they should do and what they actually do. The yoga framework suggests this integration happens not through force but through sustained, ethical practice (abhyasa and vairagya). Patanjali's vision of integrated consciousness provides CBT practitioners with a meaningful aspirational goal beyond mere symptom reduction, pointing toward human flourishing.
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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