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Concept
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Samadhi: Unified Consciousness and Integration

Patanjali's samadhi (integrated awareness) as the ultimate goal of unified, coherent consciousness contrasted with fragmented experience in psychosis.

Patan
Why It Matters

Samadhi represents the pinnacle of Patanjali's system: a state of unified, integrated consciousness where subject and object merge into undivided awareness. This contrasts sharply with the fragmented, dissociated, and compartmentalized consciousness characteristic of schizophrenia and psychosis. In psychotic states, individuals often experience breaks in the sense of unified self: competing voices, contradictory perceptions, and loss of coherent narrative identity. Samadhi serves as both theoretical ideal and practical direction: recovery involves progressively integrating fragmented experiences into coherent selfhood and unified awareness. While full samadhi may be a distant goal, the principle guides therapeutic work toward greater integration and coherence. Meditation practices in the yoga tradition cultivate increasingly subtle states of integrated consciousness, providing a systematic map for moving from fragmentation toward wholeness. For individuals in recovery from psychosis, samadhi-oriented practice—including meditation, narrative therapy, and mindfulness—supports the gradual restoration of unified selfhood, coherent perception, and integrated functioning across psychological domains.

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Mental Health
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