Experiencing samadhi (integrated awareness) as the natural outcome of resolving attachment patterns through yogic practice.
Samadhi, the ultimate goal of Patanjali's yoga, is sometimes translated as enlightenment but more precisely means integrated awareness—complete absorption where subject and object merge without losing individual consciousness. In attachment relationships, samadhi represents secure attachment's pinnacle: the capacity to be completely present with your partner while maintaining your own center. Insecure attachment creates fragmented consciousness—part anxiously monitoring for danger, part defended against intimacy. Samadhi emerges as these fragmented states integrate through sustained practice. In secure relating, you experience moments of samadhi: losing self-consciousness during genuine intimacy, functioning as unified awareness rather than conflicted parts. Patanjali teaches samadhi develops progressively through the eight-limbed path (asana, pranayama, meditation, etc.). Applied to attachment healing, this suggests that secure attachment develops not through willpower or insight alone but through systematic transformation of the nervous system and consciousness itself. Partners who meditate report naturally experiencing more secure states. Samadhi in relationship means both people can be simultaneously fully themselves and fully merged, conscious yet transparent. This state, though rare, indicates fundamental healing of attachment wounds.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.