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The Five Obstacles (Antarayas) and Treatment Resistance

Patanjali's five obstacles to mental clarity mirror CBT treatment resistance, offering diagnostic insight into why clients struggle with therapeutic work.

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Why It Matters

Patanjali identifies five primary obstacles to yoga: disease, dullness, doubt, carelessness, and false perception. These antarayas directly map onto CBT treatment resistance and therapeutic stagnation. Disease (physical/mental illness) includes depression and anxiety that dampen motivation. Dullness reflects avoidance and low engagement with homework. Doubt manifests as skepticism about CBT's efficacy. Carelessness appears as inconsistent practice and forgotten techniques. False perception includes beliefs that change is impossible or undeserved. By recognizing clients' resistance through Patanjali's framework, therapists gain diagnostic clarity. Rather than pathologizing non-compliance, the yogic lens suggests systematic obstacles requiring targeted interventions. Addressing dullness requires energy cultivation; doubt needs evidence review; false perception needs cognitive work. This framework transforms treatment planning into a systematic removal of obstacles rather than a linear progression, honoring the complexity of psychological change.

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Mental Health
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