The yogic principle of sustained, deliberate repetition that rewires neural pathways, mirroring DBT's skills training and behavioral change methodology.
Patanjali emphasizes abhyasa—persistent, committed practice over time—as the foundation for transformation. This directly parallels DBT's intensive skills training model, which requires repeated rehearsal of distress tolerance, emotion regulation, and mindfulness techniques. Emotional dysregulation involves entrenched neural pathways and habitual responses; abhyasa addresses this through purposeful repetition. DBT recognizes that attending one skills group isn't sufficient; mastery emerges through daily practice. Yoga Sutra 1.12 states that practice becomes firm when attended to for long time, without interruption, and with sincere devotion. This ancient wisdom validates DBT's demand for homework, phone coaching, and between-session practice. When clients struggle with consistency, understanding abhyasa reframes practice not as punishment but as the essential mechanism for lasting emotional regulation and psychological freedom.
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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