Meditative absorption
States of deep meditative absorption where a settled mind grows luminous, joyful, and utterly steady.
When concentration deepens far enough, the meditating mind can drop into states of profound stillness and gathered clarity. Buddhism calls these jhāna (Sanskrit dhyāna, "meditative absorption" — the same word that, traveling through China as chan and Japan as zen, eventually named whole schools). A jhāna is not a trance in the sense of blanking out; it is a highly alert, collected, unusually pleasant state in which the five hindrances that normally agitate the mind have temporarily quieted.
The early texts describe four such absorptions, entered in sequence as the mind grows more refined: (1) the first jhāna, marked by applied and sustained attention on the meditation object, together with a rapture or joy (pīti) and a deep well-being (sukha); (2) the second, where the effortful steering of attention drops away and inner confidence and joy take over; (3) the third, where even the buzz of rapture is released, leaving a serene, mindful contentment; and (4) the fourth, where pleasure and pain alike fall still, leaving a luminous, utterly even-minded equanimity and one-pointed awareness. Beyond these lie four still subtler "formless" attainments.
It is worth being precise: jhāna is a tool, not the goal. These states make the mind supple, bright, and steady — excellent ground from which to turn toward the liberating insight (wisdom) that actually ends suffering — but they are themselves temporary and conditioned. Buddhist traditions debate how deep one must go and whether jhāna is strictly required for awakening, but all treat it as a refining of the mind rather than an escape from the world.
Key passages(20)
Keeping the Breath in Mind & Lessons in Samadhi · Ajahn Lee Dhammadharo
Wisdom Develops Samadhi · Ajahn Maha Bua
The Attention Revolution: Unlocking the Power of the Focused Mind · B. Alan Wallace
The Collected Teachings on the Bodhisatva · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)