Patanjali's concept of repeated, dedicated practice is essential to DBT's skill-building model where emotional regulation requires consistent behavioral rehearsal.
Abhyasa—continuous, disciplined practice—is Patanjali's antidote to mental turbulence. Rather than expecting spontaneous emotional mastery, this principle acknowledges that transformation requires repetition over months and years. DBT explicitly operationalizes abhyasa through homework assignments, skill practice between sessions, and real-world behavioral experimentation. Emotional dysregulation persists because neural pathways supporting reactive patterns have been reinforced countless times. Abhyasa offers clients philosophical permission to embrace practice as non-negotiable, shifting focus from perfection to cumulative effort. In DBT terms, this means practicing distress tolerance skills in low-stakes situations before crises occur, rehearsing interpersonal effectiveness scripts, and repeatedly applying emotion regulation techniques until they become automatic. Patanjali's insistence that abhyasa must be 'done for a long time, without interruption, and with sincere conviction' validates DBT's demands on client commitment and normalizes the gradual, effortful nature of psychological transformation.
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