The mind that won't focus.
The phone ate your attention.
Take it back.
Brain fog, the half-watched movie, the article you read three times. त्राटक is the candle-gaze practice — a small, focused looking that gives the attention back to you.
A fatigued prefrontal cortex
The part of the brain that holds attention — the prefrontal cortex — is built for short bursts of effortful focus, alternated with rest. Modern life inverts that: constant low-grade attention to many things at once, never fully resting, never fully focused. The result is a brain that does neither well.
Dopamine is hijacked by short rewards (notifications, scroll, refresh). Each one trains the brain that focused attention is harder than it should be. After enough months, even reading a paragraph feels like effort.
the yogic understandingTrataka — the gaze as concentration training
The lineage offers a precise antidote. Sit. Light a small flame at eye level, two feet away. Gaze at the flame, unblinking, as long as comfortable — usually a minute to start. Eyes water; close them. The afterimage of the flame appears between the brows. Hold the afterimage as long as it stays.
That is one round. Three rounds, daily. Within a few weeks, the mind discovers it can stay on one thing again. This is धारणा, the sixth limb — concentration. It is the doorway to ध्यान, meditation.
what helps, and whyConcentration is a muscle
You will be bad at this for a week. You will be bad at it because you are out of practice, not because you cannot do it. By week three you will notice that other tasks — a meeting, a book, a conversation — have somehow become easier to stay in.
That is the practice's gift. Concentration practised on a flame becomes concentration available everywhere.
Attention is a muscle. We forgot to use it. It comes back.
Trataka, three rounds
A note: epilepsy, recent eye surgery, severe dry eye — skip. And the candle is always at eye level, not above or below.
Come find the
flame with me.
It is easier in a room with others doing it too. Free Saturday class — I'll guide the first round.
Reserve your place — Saturday 7:30 PM