Patanjali's ultimate goal of samadhi—undivided, integrated consciousness—represents the psychological completion of addiction recovery through unified attention.
Samadhi, the ultimate state in Patanjali's Yoga system, represents complete absorption and integration of consciousness. While often understood as a meditative achievement, samadhi offers a powerful model for understanding recovery completion. Addiction fragments consciousness: part of the mind craves while another part resists; attention scatters across justifications, shame, and compulsion. Recovery naturally progresses toward samadhi—a state of integrated, coherent consciousness where the whole being aligns toward health. This isn't about transcendence away from life but unified engagement with it. In practical recovery terms, samadhi represents the integration point where someone's values, actions, body, and consciousness align seamlessly. Cravings no longer create internal civil war because the person isn't divided against themselves. Modern psychology recognizes this as integration and coherence. Patanjali's framework suggests that addiction recovery isn't complete when abstinence begins but when consciousness becomes sufficiently integrated that addictive pulls lose power naturally. The goal becomes psychological wholeness—where the scattered, conflicted mind becomes unified and single-pointed, naturally directing itself toward genuine wellbeing and authentic freedom rather than compulsive escape.
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