The yogic state of unified absorption applied as a community experience of shared belonging beyond individual defensiveness.
Samadhi, the eighth and final limb of yoga in Patanjali's system, represents a state of unified consciousness where subject-object duality dissolves. Applied to communities, samadhi points toward experiences of collective flow, shared purpose, and belonging that transcend individual boundaries and defensiveness. When groups taste samadhi together—through collective practices, shared meaning-making, or aligned action—they access a deeper knowing that they're fundamentally interconnected. This shared experience becomes the bedrock of psychological safety precisely because it's beyond ideology or policy. Members have tasted what it feels like to be held in a field larger than individual fear or ego. Patanjali's teaching suggests that this state is available to groups willing to practice together with discipline and intention. Psychological safety rooted in samadhi is unshakeable because it's grounded in direct experience of unity. Communities that create regular containers for samadhi experiences—whether through practice, ritual, or collective work—develop an immune system against fragmentation. Members return to individual interactions remembering their fundamental connection, which transforms how they navigate conflict, difference, and vulnerability.
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