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Concept
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Ahimsa: Compassionate Response to Dysregulation

Patanjali's foundational ethical principle of non-harm extends to self-compassion and eliminates the harsh inner critic that intensifies emotional dysregulation.

Patan
Why It Matters

Ahimsa, the first yama in Patanjali's framework, means non-harming—extending compassion to all beings, including oneself. Emotionally dysregulated clients frequently compound their distress with self-blame, harsh self-judgment, and punitive internal dialogue. Patanjali teaches that ahimsa toward oneself is foundational; harming oneself through cruelty deepens dysregulation's grip. DBT's implicit compassionate stance mirrors this: validation precedes change, and skills are taught with the understanding that dysregulation reflects learned patterns and unmet needs, not personal failure. By anchoring ahimsa in Yogic ethics, clients recognize that self-compassion during dysregulation is not indulgence but necessary non-harm. This reframe shifts from 'I'm broken and deserve this suffering' to 'I'm struggling, and I deserve support and skill-building.' Ahimsa creates the relational safety required for DBT skills to take root and reduces the shame spirals that feed chronic dysregulation.

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Mental Health
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