The state of integrated awareness where observer and experience merge, representing the ultimate goal of emotional regulation beyond suppression or avoidance.
Samadhi, often translated as "absorption" or "integration," represents the culmination of yogic practice—a state where the observer and observed become unified and the mind achieves profound stability. For emotional dysregulation, samadhi offers a vision beyond DBT's immediate crisis management: integrated emotional presence. Rather than fighting dysregulation or achieving perfect control, samadhi suggests that true stability emerges when you stop fragmenting yourself—when the part that judges emotions, the part that experiences them, and the part that acts all align. This addresses the internal conflict that perpetuates dysregulation cycles. DBT's interpersonal effectiveness and emotion regulation modules work toward this integration by helping practitioners accept emotions as valid while simultaneously choosing values-aligned action. Samadhi is not emotional numbness but coherent presence. Through consistent practice of yoga's eight limbs, including ethical foundations and meditation, practitioners develop a nervous system that can hold emotional intensity without fragmenting into reactivity. This represents the transformation from dysregulation as a problem to dysregulation as information moving through an integrated, stable awareness.
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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