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Concept
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Antaranga Sadhana: Internal Practice for Deep Emotional Work

The yogic path of internal practices (concentration, meditation, absorption) mirroring DBT's mindfulness and emotion regulation modules.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali distinguishes antaranga sadhana—internal practices requiring introspection and meditation—from bahiranga sadhana (external practices like postures and breathing). For emotional dysregulation, antaranga practices are essential: mindfulness meditation, self-inquiry into emotional triggers, mental noting of thought-emotion patterns, and concentrated attention on the present moment. These internal practices build metacognitive capacity—the ability to observe mind processes without being fused with them. DBT's mindfulness module and emotion regulation work are fundamentally antaranga sadhana, though Western psychology uses different language. Patanjali's tradition provides centuries of refined methodology for antaranga work: detailed guidance on concentration, managing distraction, deepening insight, and sustaining practice without frustration. Someone with emotional dysregulation benefits from understanding that their dysregulation is partly a concentration problem (attention hijacked by threat-detection) and partly a meditation problem (no capacity to observe without reacting). By reframing emotions regulation work as spiritual practice rather than clinical task, clients access deeper motivation and patience. The yoga perspective legitimizes the slow, internal work as the heart of healing, not a supplement to medications or brief interventions.

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Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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