Patanjali's sanyama practices develop concentrated observation and insight into addictive patterns, enabling conscious control over previously automatic impulses.
Sanyama consists of three advanced practices: dharana (concentration), dhyana (sustained meditation), and samadhi (absorption). Together they develop profound mastery over mental processes. Applied to addiction recovery, sanyama enables one to observe cravings with concentrated attention, understand their underlying patterns through sustained inquiry, and experience moments of freedom from identification with them. Rather than being swept away by automatic craving-behavior sequences, sanyama develops the capacity to pause and witness the entire process. This creates a revolutionary gap: between impulse and action. In this gap lies freedom. Someone with developed sanyama can observe a craving arise—noticing its sensations, the thoughts accompanying it, the emotional state preceding it—without automatically acting. This observational mastery gradually reveals that cravings are not permanent, that they fluctuate and pass, that one can exist in their presence without being controlled by them. Patanjali taught that through sanyama, one develops supernatural powers; for addiction recovery, the most important supernatural power is freedom from the seemingly irresistible pull of compulsive behavior.
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