Patanjali's principle of sustained practice (abhyasa) explains why CBT's repetitive thought records and behavioral experiments create lasting psychological transformation.
Abhyasa, the yogic principle of sustained, dedicated practice, reveals why CBT's effectiveness depends on consistent repetition rather than insight alone. Patanjali taught that mental transformation requires relentless practice—not occasional effort. Similarly, CBT's power emerges through daily thought records, repeated behavioral experiments, and consistent cognitive restructuring. The Yoga Sutras emphasize that abhyasa must be practiced 'for a long time, without interruption, with sincere devotion.' This directly parallels CBT's requirement for homework completion and sustained engagement between sessions. By framing CBT practices as abhyasa, clients understand that transforming ingrained thought patterns requires dedication and persistence. The yogic perspective validates the time investment needed for psychological change, shifting expectations from quick fixes to committed personal practice that gradually rewires neural pathways and habitual thinking patterns.
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