The ultimate yoga state of absorbed connection while maintaining individual consciousness, the ideal secure attachment outcome.
Samadhi, the eighth and final limb of Patanjali's yoga system, represents a state of complete absorption or union—the traditional goal of yoga practice. In relationship terms, samadhi offers a powerful image of secure attachment: complete intimacy and presence with another while maintaining intact selfhood. Many insecurely attached people unconsciously seek merger—anxious individuals through desperate clinging, avoidant individuals through fantasy idealization—because they misunderstand intimacy as requiring loss of self. Samadhi contradicts this: true union requires both partners remaining fully conscious and present. Secure attachment resembles samadhi: you are completely present with your partner, deeply connected, yet fully aware of yourself as a distinct person with separate needs and identity. There's no self-abandonment or defensive distancing. In samadhi, the meditator doesn't disappear into the object of meditation; rather, the distinction between subject and object dissolves while both remain. Applied to relationships, this means loving completely while maintaining healthy boundaries, being intimate without merging, connecting authentically without losing yourself. Samadhi represents the maturity point of attachment work: relationship as the meeting of two whole beings in conscious union rather than two incomplete beings seeking completion.
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