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Samyama

Yoga and Total Health

|

August 2021

So vast are the powers of the mind that it is easy to get distracted even at the highest level

- Murarilal Dhanuka

Samyama

The third chapter of Patanjali Yoga Sutra describes the powers of the mind. The first Sutra explains 'Dharana' as ‘Dharana is holding the mind on to some particular object.’ The object may be in the body or outside the body and one holds one’s self in that state. The second Sutra of the third chapter says that an unbroken flow of knowledge of that object is 'Dhyana'. Swami Vivekananda explains, “The mind tries to think of one object, and holds itself to one particular spot, as the top of the head, the heart, etc., and if the mind succeeds in receiving the sensations only through that part of the body, and through no other part, that would be Dharana (concentration), and when the mind succeeds in keeping itself in that state for some time, it is called Dhyana (meditation).”

Dr. Jayadeva says momentary concentration is no concentration at all. Time measure is the essence of concentration. The mind must be fixed on one object for some time. This time measure depends on Pranayama. There is a need for mastering time. Dr. Jayadeva further explains that “'Dhyana' is the continuous mental activity on a fixed object”. For success in

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