The state of complete absorption and mental unification where emotional reactivity dissolves into integrated awareness.
Samadhi, yoga's ultimate goal in Patanjali's system, represents a state of complete absorption where the distinction between observer and observed dissolves. In terms of emotional regulation, Samadhi describes moments when you're so fully present that emotional reactivity ceases. This isn't emotional suppression but transcendence—emotions still arise but no longer fragment your attention or create suffering. Consider a moment of profound beauty or deep meditation: in those instances, worry, anxiety, and ego-driven reactivity simply aren't present because consciousness is unified in the moment. Patanjali teaches that Samadhi is cultivable through consistent practice of the eight limbs of yoga. Each regulation technique—breath work, ethical practice, posture, sensory withdrawal—prepares the mind for this unified state. While complete Samadhi is rare, glimpses of it reveal something crucial: emotional suffering requires fragmented consciousness. When attention is scattered between past regrets and future fears, emotions destabilize us. But when consciousness becomes unified in present awareness, emotions are experienced but don't control us. Thus, Samadhi represents the ultimate emotional freedom.
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