The yogic principle of disciplined, repetitive effort that builds emotional resilience, mirroring DBT skills practice and behavioral rehearsal.
Patanjali emphasizes abhyasa—consistent, long-term practice—as essential to achieving mental mastery. This directly parallels DBT's requirement for repeated skills drilling and homework assignments. Emotional dysregulation isn't fixed through insight alone; it requires neurological rewiring via repeated activation of new response patterns. Abhyasa teaches that each time you practice mindfulness during anger, distress tolerance during crisis, or opposite action during depression, you strengthen neural pathways supporting regulation. The yoga tradition normalizes the need for sustained effort without perfectionism, encouraging practitioners to view setbacks as part of the process rather than failures. For DBT clients, understanding abhyasa reframes the repetitive homework and skills practice from tedious obligation to sacred discipline—a time-tested path to genuine transformation. This philosophical legitimacy increases motivation and patience with the slow work of rewiring emotional reactivity.
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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