Patanjali's twin practices of sustained effort and non-attachment illuminate how DBT skills require consistent repetition without outcome obsession.
Patanjali teaches that progress in yoga requires abhyasa (sustained, devoted practice) and vairagya (non-attachment to results). DBT skills—distress tolerance, emotion regulation, mindfulness—demand identical commitment: repeated practice without demanding immediate transformation. Abhyasa mirrors the behavioral rehearsal central to DBT; vairagya counters the frustration when skills don't instantly dissolve dysregulation. Patanjali's framework validates that emotional mastery unfolds through accumulated small practices, not breakthrough moments. The Yoga Sutras emphasize that vairagya prevents the secondary suffering of despair when progress feels slow. For emotionally dysregulated individuals, this philosophy reframes skill-building as a humble, long-term cultivation rather than a crisis-driven fix. The combination of effort and surrender creates psychological resilience that complements DBT's behavioral and acceptance components.
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