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Concept
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Abhyasa: Consistent Practice and Emotional Skill-Building

Patanjali's emphasis on sustained, deliberate practice as the foundation for transformation, essential for building DBT skills into automatic responses.

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Why It Matters

Abhyasa means dedicated, repetitive practice over extended time—Patanjali's antidote to inconsistency and the foundation of lasting change. In DBT for emotional dysregulation, abhyasa directly addresses the critical need for skill rehearsal. Emotional regulation is not intellectual understanding; it requires embodied practice until responses become automatic. Patanjali emphasizes that mastery requires persistent effort without attachment to immediate results, a perspective that supports clients through the plateaus in DBT skill development. Distress tolerance, emotion regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness all demand repeated practice in real-life situations. This framework validates the intensive nature of DBT treatment and normalizes the learning curve. By framing DBT skills as abhyasa—sacred practice—clients develop psychological resilience and self-compassion when progress feels slow, understanding that transformation requires time-tested commitment rather than quick fixes.

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Mental Health
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