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Glossary›Dharana

Glossary

Dharana

Dharana is the sixth limb of Patanjali's eight-limb yoga path, defined as sustained concentration that binds attention to a single point of focus.

What is Dharana?

Dharana is the Sanskrit term for concentration, specifically the practice of fixing attention on a single point or object without wavering. In the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali (circa 400 CE), dharana appears as the sixth of eight limbs (ashtanga) and marks the transition from external practices—such as ethical conduct (yama, niyama), posture (asana), breath regulation (pranayama), and sensory withdrawal (pratyahara)—to the internal contemplative disciplines. Patanjali defines dharana in Sutra III.1 as “desa bandhas chittasya,” meaning “binding the mind to one place.” The object of concentration can be physical (a candle flame, the breath at the nostrils, a sacred image), subtle (a chakra point, a mantra sound), or abstract (a concept such as compassion or the nature of awareness itself). Dharana is not merely thinking about an object but holding attention steady on it, which distinguishes it from discursive thought.

Origins & Lineage

The concept of dharana originates in the classical yoga tradition codified by Patanjali in the Yoga Sutras, though practices of sustained concentration appear in earlier Upanishadic texts (circa 800–200 BCE) where they are associated with meditative absorption and self-inquiry. The Bhagavad Gita (circa 200 BCE–200 CE) describes disciplined focus as essential to spiritual realization, though it does not use the precise eight-limb framework. Patanjali’s systematic presentation became the foundational text for Raja Yoga and influenced subsequent Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain contemplative lineages. Medieval commentators such as Vyasa (circa 5th century CE) elaborated on dharana’s mechanics, explaining that concentration gathers the mind’s scattered energies and prepares the practitioner for dhyana (meditation) and samadhi (absorption). In the 20th century, figures such as Tirumalai Krishnamacharya, Paramahansa Yogananda, and BKS Iyengar reintroduced dharana to Western audiences through hatha yoga classes and meditation instruction, though the term itself is less commonly used than “concentration” or “one-pointedness.”

How It’s Practiced

Dharana practice begins with selecting an object of focus. Traditional objects include the tip of the nose (nasikagra drishti), the space between the eyebrows (ajna chakra), the heart center (anahata), a deity image, or a mantra repeated mentally. The practitioner assumes a stable seated posture, regulates the breath to calm the nervous system, and then directs full attention to the chosen point. When the mind wanders—which it inevitably does—the instruction is to gently but firmly return attention to the object without self-judgment. A common analogy compares dharana to training a restless puppy: repeated, patient redirection. Sessions may last from five minutes for beginners to an hour or more for experienced practitioners. Some teachers prescribe counting breaths (e.g., “one” on the inhale, “two” on the exhale, up to ten, then repeat) to anchor attention. Others use visual dharana, gazing softly at a candle flame (trataka) until the eyes water, then closing them and holding the afterimage internally. The quality of dharana is measured not by the absence of distractions but by the speed and steadiness with which attention is restored.

Dharana Today

Contemporary practitioners encounter dharana primarily in yoga teacher trainings, where Patanjali’s eight limbs are taught as foundational philosophy, and in meditation retreats that emphasize concentration practices. Vipassana centers often begin with several days of anapanasati (breath awareness) to develop dharana before introducing insight techniques. Transcendental Meditation, though not explicitly framed as dharana, shares its structure of sustained attention on a mantra. Apps such as Insight Timer and Headspace include guided concentration exercises, though they rarely use the Sanskrit term. Academic interest has grown since the 1970s, with researchers studying dharana’s effects on attention networks, default-mode network activity, and attentional blink phenomena. Neuroscience studies suggest that dharana practice strengthens prefrontal cortex function and reduces mind-wandering, findings that align with traditional descriptions of the practice’s effects.

Common Misconceptions

Dharana is not the same as meditation (dhyana) or trance (samadhi), though these terms are often conflated in popular usage. Dharana involves effort—the active, repeated return of attention—whereas dhyana is the effortless flow of awareness toward the object once concentration stabilizes. Patanjali describes the progression: dharana is like separate drops of water; dhyana is a steady stream; samadhi is merging with the ocean. Another misconception is that dharana requires stopping all thoughts. In fact, the instruction is to notice when thoughts arise and return to the object, not to suppress mental activity forcefully. Dharana is also not inherently spiritual or mystical; it is a cognitive training technique that can be applied to secular goals such as improving focus for study or work, though traditional sources emphasize its role in preparing the mind for self-realization. Finally, dharana is not achieved in a single session. Patanjali and his commentators describe it as a gradual development requiring consistent practice over months or years.

How to Begin

A practical starting point for dharana is breath-counting meditation: sit comfortably, close your eyes, and count each exhalation from one to ten, then start over. When you lose count, begin again at one without frustration. Practice for five minutes daily, gradually extending duration. For those who prefer textual guidance, the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali (translations by Edwin Bryant or Chip Hartranft are scholarly and accessible) explains dharana in context. BKS Iyengar’s Light on Yoga includes instructions for trataka and other concentration techniques. Teachers trained in Raja Yoga, Ashtanga Vinyasa, or Iyengar lineages typically include dharana instruction. Online, the Yoga Sutras Study group and traditional Vedanta centers offer courses on Patanjali’s system. For secular approaches, neuroscience-informed programs such as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) teach concentration practices without Sanskrit terminology. The key is regularity: daily five-minute sessions yield more development than sporadic longer sessions.

Related terms

yoga sutras patanjalifocused attention meditationbreath awareness meditationtranscendental meditationmindfulness based stress reductiontirumalai krishnamacharya
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