Flow helps to integrate the self because in that state of deep concentration consciousness is unusually well ordered.
Flow helps to integrate the self because in that state of deep concentration consciousness is unusually well ordered.
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi

To Integrate the Self
Topic: Self-Cultivation & Health
Flow helps to integrate the self because in that state of deep concentration consciousness is unusually well ordered. Thoughts, intentions, feelings, and all the senses are focused on the same goal. Experience is in harmony. And when the flow episode is over, one feels more ‘together’ than before, not only internally but with respect to other people and the world in general.
Mihály Csíkszentmihályi was born on September 29, 1934, in Fiume, Italy (now Rijeka, Croatia). Growing up during World War II, he experienced the hardships of the era, including being imprisoned as a child in Italy. These early experiences shaped his interest in understanding what makes life meaningful. At 22, after completing his secondary education in Rome, he immigrated to the United States and pursued psychology at the University of Chicago, where he earned both his B.A. in 1959 and his Ph.D. in 1965.
Csíkszentmihályi is best known for his concept of "flow," the state of complete immersion in an activity, often experienced during creative or challenging tasks. His interest in psychology began after hearing Carl Jung speak, which led him to explore the psychological aspects of creativity and happiness. His research showed that people often found fulfillment not from the outcome of their work but from the process itself. His book Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience (1990) became a key work in the study of human well-being.
Throughout his career, Csíkszentmihályi’s work contributed to the field of positive psychology, focusing on how people can lead more fulfilling lives. His studies, including the well-known "Experience Sampling Study," demonstrated that people were happier when engaged in tasks that challenged them just enough. Csíkszentmihályi authored many books and articles on creativity and happiness, leaving behind a legacy that continues to inspire people to find meaning in their daily activities. He passed away on October 20, 2021.
Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience
Csíkszentmihályi, Mihály. Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience. Harper & Row, 1990, p. 41.
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
Theme: Being in Self

About This Mihály Csíkszentmihályi Quotation [Commentary]
Mihály Csíkszentmihályi writes that “flow helps to integrate the self because in that state of deep concentration consciousness is unusually well ordered.” His sequence is clear: first there is “deep concentration,” and in that concentration “consciousness is unusually well ordered.” Then “thoughts, intentions, feelings, and all the senses are focused on the same goal.” The person is no longer divided by competing pulls. Attention, feeling, and purpose are gathered into one direction. In this sense, Being In Self points to inner alignment.
Mihály Csíkszentmihályi continues, “Experience is in harmony.” That harmony comes from the fact that “thoughts, intentions, feelings, and all the senses are focused on the same goal.” The whole person is engaged. A woman or a man in flow is less scattered inwardly, because consciousness has become ordered around a clear aim. Action and awareness come together, and the self feels more whole.
He then describes what remains after the moment has passed: “when the flow episode is over, one feels more ‘together’ than before, not only internally but with respect to other people and the world in general.” This completion matters. The self is more integrated within, and also more rightly related beyond itself. Being In Self, in Mihály Csíkszentmihályi’s words, is not only a matter of inward order. It leaves one “more ‘together’ than before,” inwardly, with others, and with the world in general.
The Perennial Relevance of Mihály Csíkszentmihályi’s Flow Theory
Flow theory, developed by Mihály Csíkszentmihályi, remains highly relevant in positive psychology, especially in light of recent findings that connect flow to meditative practices. Both flow and meditation are characterized by decreased activity in the prefrontal cortex, which reduces self-reflective thinking and allows for a sense of immersion and loss of self-consciousness. Studies on the Default Mode Network (DMN) suggest that, in both states, there is less mind-wandering and a heightened focus on the present moment. This overlap in brain activity shows how both flow and meditation promote well-being by helping individuals achieve a deeply engaged, attentive state. While flow often occurs during active engagement in tasks and meditation is more deliberate, their shared neurological basis highlights their potential for enhancing focus, creativity, and life satisfaction.
Flow and Meditation: Two Paths Beyond the Thinking Mind
What we have learned is that flow and meditation are closely related, but they are not the same. Flow is usually the stronger state for full immersion in a meaningful activity: attention narrows, self-consciousness recedes, time shifts, and action and awareness feel joined. Meditation is usually the stronger path for training that capacity over time: it cultivates the trait-level ability to notice thoughts without being ruled by them, return to the present, and reduce rumination. Neurobiologically, both are associated with a quieter default mode network, which supports less self-referential chatter, along with stronger coordination among attention, salience, and executive-control networks. Flow seems to arise more through challenge, skill, clear goals, and immediate feedback, while meditation develops more through repeated practice in stabilizing attention and loosening identification with the thinking mind.
On the spiritual side, both can be understood as ways of becoming less confined within the usual ego-narrative and more available to reality as it is. Meditation has the clearer evidence for developing enduring traits of compassion, self-regulation, and, in some forms, care for others. Loving-kindness and compassion practices especially appear to deepen capacities related to empathy and warmth. Flow can also carry a spiritual quality, especially when it is joined to meaning, beauty, service, or creative devotion, but its main strength is not explicit contemplative or moral formation. Taken together, meditation more reliably forms the inner ground, while flow more readily shows what happens when that ground becomes absorbed in wholehearted, skillful participation.
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