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<li style="font-weight:bold">Nirbeeja Samadhi/ Nirvikalpa Samadhi: <span style="font-weight:normal">Nir (without)+ Beeja (seed object of meditation). <br/>So, Nirbeeja samadhi is the stage at which the object of focus or pratyaya vanishes.</span></li>
 
<li style="font-weight:bold">Nirbeeja Samadhi/ Nirvikalpa Samadhi: <span style="font-weight:normal">Nir (without)+ Beeja (seed object of meditation). <br/>So, Nirbeeja samadhi is the stage at which the object of focus or pratyaya vanishes.</span></li>
 
[[File:Types of Samadhi.jpg|center|Fig.1 Types of Samadhi]]<center>Fig.1 Types of Samadhi</center>
 
[[File:Types of Samadhi.jpg|center|Fig.1 Types of Samadhi]]<center>Fig.1 Types of Samadhi</center>
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<li style="font-weight:bold">Dharma megha samadhi: <span style="font-weight:normal">Dharma means virtue, and megha means cloud, so, in this stage of samadhi, clouds of goodness pour down upon the meditator. At this moment, one does not seek anything, be it siddhi of any kind or bliss, peace, oneness. All the desires end at this stage of samadhi.</span></li>
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<li style="font-weight:bold">Kaivalya: <span style="font-weight:normal">Kaivalya is a Sanskrit word whose root is Keval, which means alone or only. Kaivalya is the stage of freedom. Nothing matters at this stage, any kind of vedana (sukhatmaka or dukhatmaka), desire, etc.</span></li></ul>
 
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