The practice of sustained, disciplined effort to rewire neural patterns, foundational to behavioral activation and exposure therapy in CBT.
Abhyasa, meaning constant practice or disciplined repetition, is Patanjali's answer to how transformation occurs—through sustained, intentional effort over time. This concept directly supports CBT's behavioral interventions, particularly exposure therapy and behavioral activation, which require clients to repeatedly engage with situations they typically avoid. The yoga tradition recognizes that a single exposure or thought challenge is insufficient; lasting change requires building new neural pathways through consistent practice. Abhyasa validates the homework assignments central to CBT, reframing them not as punitive tasks but as essential cultivation practices. By understanding behavioral change as requiring disciplined repetition rather than insight alone, clients develop realistic expectations and resilience through setbacks. The Yogic framework suggests that initial efforts feel effortful and uncomfortable—exactly the resistance clients encounter—normalizing the discomfort as inevitable in any genuine transformation process, thereby increasing treatment adherence.
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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