Patanjali's concept of sustained, intentional effort required for psychological transformation—the mechanism underlying DBT skill-building and emotional mastery.
Abhyasa, meaning dedicated practice, is Patanjali's answer to how consciousness transforms: through consistent, deliberate repetition of skillful actions. This directly mirrors DBT's foundation that emotional regulation requires systematic practice of specific techniques. Abhyasa acknowledges that intellectual understanding alone doesn't change emotion dysregulation; embodied, repeated practice does. In the Yoga Sutras, Patanjali emphasizes that abhyasa must be practiced "for a long time, without interruption, with sincere devotion" to be effective. DBT's structure—skills training, phone coaching, individual therapy, and consultation teams—is essentially abhyasa systematized for modern emotional healing. Whether practicing distress tolerance skills during crisis or emotion regulation techniques daily, individuals are developing the neural pathways and automatic responses that transform their relationship with dysregulated emotions. This concept reframes emotional dysregulation as a skill deficit requiring patient, persistent practice rather than a character flaw.
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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