Patanjali distinguishes inner practice (meditation, mindfulness, concentration) as the actual yoga, validating DBT's internal skill-building over external behavior change alone.
Patanjali emphasizes that the inner limbs—pratyahara (sensory withdrawal), dharana (concentration), dhyana (meditation), and samadhi (integration)—constitute the true yoga or "real work." External practices prepare the ground, but transformation occurs through sustained internal focus. For emotional dysregulation, this principle is crucial: behavioral DBT skills are valuable, yet lasting change requires the internal capacity to observe emotions, sustain attention, and develop equanimity. Many people practice mindfulness or distress tolerance skills mechanically without developing the deeper mental stability Patanjali calls antaranga sadhana. True skill mastery involves not just "doing" distress tolerance but cultivating the witnessing consciousness that allows emotions to arise and pass without identifying with them. This inner practice requires regular meditation, sustained attention practice, and development of mental clarity. DBT's emphasis on skills practice becomes antaranga sadhana when practitioners engage with genuine inquiry into their emotional experience rather than merely following techniques for symptom relief.
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