Samadhi
is the commonly used Sanskrit word that means a high state of meditation when
outward consciousness is lost. It is considered to be the last stage of
meditation or spiritual life. Therefore, it is necessary to know the detailed meaning
of this word. This is a Sanskrit word. Sanskrit is a classical language like
Greek, Latin, and Persian. And in Sanskrit, as in most classical languages,
most words are derived from a stem or root.
The word ‘samadhi’ has been derived from
the root word dha, which means to
put, place, set, lay, bestow, impart, or present. The word ‘samadhi’ means
placing together, joining, combining, union, completion, concentration,
attention, or agreement. In spiritual life,
‘samadhi’ is a state of meditation when the meditator and the meditated merge.
There is no thought process at this stage. This is considered the highest state
of meditation and the best state of a calm mind. This is also the highest state
of concentration, where the object concentrated
upon and the person who is concentrating become one. In this state of
meditation, the difference between one’s self and the object being meditated
upon is completely removed.
The Upanishads require one to refrain
from needless activity, restraint of speech, body, and mind in renunciation and
forbearance and patient bearing of all hardships of spiritual life, before one
can attain samadhi. One can attain one’s true nature, the Atman, only through
samadhi. However, samadhi can be brought about by following of any one of the
four yogas propounded by Swami Vivekananda: raja, karma, bhakti, and jnana. One
can attain samadhi by following the different stages of the practice of raja
yoga or psychic control. One can attain samadhi also by performing selfless
action as envisaged by Swamiji in karma yoga. So is the case with bhakti and
jnana yoga.
In samadhi the mind loses cognition of
all other objects, including the cognition that one is meditating. In this
state, the mind is so engrossed with the object of meditation that nothing else
is cognised. Samadhi also means going beyond the three states of awareness of
waking, dreaming, and sleeping. In the state of samadhi, the ego is completely
destroyed. Then, the mind ceases to exist and is merged into a state that is
beyond the mind and the ego, where the self loses its consciousness. Samadhi converts one from a normal person to one who is
enlightened and has broken free of the fetters of the bondage of transmigration.
Samadhi involves transcending the cycle
of cause and effect and also the narrow realm of reason or logic. Nothing is
logical with samadhi. The body almost entirely stops its metabolic activities,
yet the person does not die. There is no thought in that state, and yet the
person returns as a person with complete and uninterrupted clarity of thought
and a very clear worldview. Samadhi can thus be termed as a state that is
beyond logic, beyond awareness, and beyond thoughts.
Author is Editor of Prabuddha Bharata
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This article was first published in the December 2017 issue of the Prabuddha Bharata, monthly journal of The Ramakrishna Order started by Swami Vivekananda in 1896. This article is courtesy and copyright Prabuddha Bharata www.advaitaashrama.org I have been reading the Prabuddha Bharata for years and found it enlightening. Cost is Rs 180/ for one year, Rs 475/ for three years, Rs 2100/ for twenty years. To subscribe http://advaitaashrama.org/pbSubscription