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Glossary›Dhyana

Glossary

Dhyana

Dhyana is meditative absorption in Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain traditions—the seventh limb of Patanjali's eight-limbed yoga and a state of sustained, effortless concentration.

What is Dhyana?

Dhyana (ध्यान) is a Sanskrit term denoting meditative absorption or sustained contemplative focus, central to Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain spiritual practice. In Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras (circa 400 CE), dhyana constitutes the seventh of eight limbs (ashtanga), positioned between dharana (concentration) and samadhi (absorption). While dharana involves directing attention to a single object, dhyana describes the unbroken flow of awareness toward that object—a state where effort dissolves into effortless continuity. The term migrated into Chinese as chán (禪), Japanese as zen (禅), and Pali as jhāna, each tradition developing distinct interpretive frameworks.

Unlike casual meditation or relaxation techniques, dhyana represents a specific developmental stage in contemplative maturity. Patanjali defines it as pratyaya-ekatānata—one-pointedness of mental content—where the boundary between observer, observed, and act of observation begins to thin. In Buddhist Abhidhamma literature, jhānas are mapped as discrete altered states characterized by diminishing mental factors: the first jhāna retains applied and sustained thought; the fourth eliminates even pleasure and pain, resting in equanimity.

Origins & Lineage

Dhyana’s roots extend to the Vedic period (1500–500 BCE), appearing in Upanishadic texts such as the Brihadaranyaka and Chandogya Upanishads, where sages describe withdrawal from sensory phenomena toward inner luminosity. The Bhagavad Gita (circa 200 BCE–200 CE) presents Krishna instructing Arjuna in dhyana yoga, emphasizing steadiness of mind and devotional absorption.

Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras systematized dhyana within the eight-limbed path: yama, niyama, asana, pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, dhyana, samadhi. Commentators including Vyasa (circa 400–500 CE) and later figures such as Swami Vivekananda (1863–1902) elaborated on the mechanics: dharana as fixing attention (e.g., on a candle flame or mantra), dhyana as the sustained current that follows.

In Buddhism, the Buddha’s pre-enlightenment training under yogic teachers Alara Kalama and Uddaka Ramaputta centered on jhāna attainment. The Visuddhimagga (Path of Purification, 5th century CE), composed by Buddhaghosa, catalogs forty meditation objects and eight jhānas—four material-sphere (rūpa) and four immaterial-sphere (arūpa). Theravāda and Mahāyāna lineages diverged on whether jhānas are prerequisites for liberative insight or auxiliary supports.

Jainism parallels this with dhyāna as one of the six internal austerities (tapas), classified into virtuous, sorrowful, and cruel meditations, with the first leading toward liberation (moksha).

How It’s Practiced

Dhyana practice begins with establishing dharana: selecting a meditation object—breath, mantra, deity image (ishta devata), or abstract concept like compassion. In Patanjali’s schema, when attention repeatedly returns to the object with decreasing effort, dharana transitions into dhyana. The practitioner experiences taijasa—a luminous, flowing quality where mental modifications (vrittis) subside.

Physically, traditional postures include padmasana (lotus) or sukhasana (easy pose), spine erect, hands in dhyana mudra (right hand resting on left, thumbs touching). Breath may be regulated through pranayama beforehand, but during dhyana itself, respiration typically becomes subtle and autonomic.

In Zen monasteries, dhyana (zazen) involves facing a wall in half-lotus, with instruction to neither suppress nor indulge thought, allowing mental phenomena to arise and dissolve. Rinzai Zen may employ koans—paradoxical questions—as dhyana objects. Soto Zen emphasizes shikantaza (just sitting), objectless awareness.

Theravāda retreats often scaffold jhāna through samatha (tranquility) techniques: meditators focus on breath at the nostril tip until a nimitta (mental sign) arises—a luminous disk or abstract light—then stabilize attention on it until entering the first jhāna, marked by rapture (pīti) and pleasure (sukha). Subsequent jhānas involve progressively refined mental factors.

Tibetan Buddhist śamatha practice similarly cultivates dhyana as preparation for vipassanā (insight), often using visualizations of Buddha-forms or seed syllables.

Dhyana Today

Contemporary seekers encounter dhyana in several contexts. Vipassana meditation centers—such as those teaching S.N. Goenka’s ten-day retreats—include ānāpāna (breath awareness) leading toward jhānic states before transitioning to insight practices. Iyengar Yoga studios teach dhyana as the culmination of asana and pranayama sequences. Zen centers in the Soto and Rinzai lineages offer daily zazen and intensive sesshins (meditation retreats).

Yogic traditions stemming from Swami Sivananda (1887–1963) and disciples like Swami Vishnu-devananda emphasize dhyana within a broader sadhana (spiritual discipline) incorporating asana, kirtan, and scriptural study. Transcendental Meditation, while using distinct terminology, mirrors dhyana’s structure: effortless repetition of a mantra until thought settles into restful alertness.

Scholarly interest has grown via contemplative neuroscience. Researchers studying Tibetan monks practicing śamatha report sustained gamma-wave activity and altered default-mode network functioning during deep meditative absorption, correlating with classical descriptions of dhyana’s phenomenology.

Common Misconceptions

Dhyana is not synonymous with all meditation. The English term “meditation” spans discursive reflection (vicara), visualization, mantra repetition, and insight practices, whereas dhyana denotes a specific absorptive state. Nor is it relaxation or stress reduction; while calming effects may arise, dhyana’s traditional aim is liberative insight or union with the divine, not mental health per se.

Dhyana does not eliminate thought permanently. Patanjali describes it as reducing mental modifications, not annihilating consciousness. Even in deep jhāna, subtle cognitive factors remain until the highest formless absorptions.

It is not exclusively seated practice. Bhakti yoga traditions speak of dhyana in devotional song or ritual; Karma Yoga frames selfless action as dhyana. The Bhagavad Gita presents multiple dhyana paths suited to different temperaments.

Finally, dhyana is not instant. Classical texts describe years of consistent dharana before dhyana stabilizes. Contemporary eight-week mindfulness courses, while valuable, occupy a different developmental terrain than the sustained absorptions described in Patanjali or Buddhaghosa.

How to Begin

Start with dharana: commit to five minutes daily of single-pointed attention. The breath is universally accessible—observe the sensation at the nostrils or the rise and fall of the abdomen. When distraction occurs, return without judgment. Over weeks, the returns become swifter; over months, gaps between distractions lengthen.

Read Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras (translation by Edwin Bryant or Chip Hartranft provides scholarly rigor and accessibility). For Buddhist context, consult Bhikkhu Bodhi’s translation of the Anapanasati Sutta or Leigh Brasington’s Right Concentration for Western practitioner guidance on jhāna.

Seek instruction. Dhyana’s subtleties—distinguishing genuine absorption from pleasant relaxation, navigating the nimitta, avoiding forceful straining—benefit from teacher feedback. Vipassana centers (dhamma.org) offer free ten-day retreats. Local Zen centers provide daily zazen with periodic dokusan (private interview). Iyengar or Sivananda Yoga schools embed dhyana within comprehensive training.

Recognize that dhyana unfolds developmentally. Weeks may pass in restless dharana before the first taste of sustained flow. Traditional sources frame this as cumulative purification (samskara erosion), not linear skill acquisition. Patience, consistency, and right effort—energized but not strained—characterize the path.

Related terms

yoga sutras patanjalifocused attention meditationcalm abiding meditationtranscendental meditationpranayama meditationsamadhi
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