The ultimate attentional state where the observer, observation, and observed merge into unified awareness—the goal of Patanjali's yoga system.
Samadhi is often misunderstood as a trance or blissful state, but it precisely means absorption—the dissolution of the boundary between the attender and the attended-to. In samadhi, attention becomes so unified that the subject-object split vanishes; you are not "focusing on" something, you are merged with it. Patanjali describes this as the natural result of sustained ekagrata practice. For attention science, samadhi illuminates an important truth: the deepest focus is not effortful but effortless. When you reach samadhi, you're no longer "trying" to concentrate; the mind has naturally settled into its unified state. This matches flow-state research: peak performance occurs when self-consciousness dissolves and action flows without deliberate control. Samadhi is not a mystical state reserved for monks; moments of it occur naturally when you're completely absorbed in music, conversation, sport, or creative work. Understanding samadhi as a natural cognitive state demystifies it and makes it accessible. By knowing samadhi's characteristics—absorption, clarity, absence of self-consciousness—you can recognize when you're approaching it and create conditions to sustain it, optimizing both attention and performance.
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