Patanjali's principle of sustained, dedicated practice for building mental steadiness, essential for maintaining DBT skills during emotional intensity.
Abhyasa means devoted, repetitive practice over time without attachment to immediate results. Patanjali positions this as the counterweight to emotional turbulence: consistency itself becomes transformative. For DBT and emotional dysregulation, abhyasa is the discipline of practicing skills during calm moments so they're accessible during crisis. Mindfulness meditation, distress tolerance techniques, and emotion regulation worksheets only work through regular rehearsal—not sporadic effort. The Yoga Sutras acknowledge that one or two attempts fail; mastery emerges through long-term commitment. This addresses a core DBT challenge: clients often practice skills inconsistently, expecting instantaneous relief. Patanjali's abhyasa reframes emotional recovery as an athletic training process requiring daily micro-practices. The psychological shift is profound: emotional dysregulation becomes a condition requiring patient, consistent skill-building rather than a character flaw or treatment failure, reducing shame and supporting sustainable behavioral change.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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