Yoga's physical and breathing practices that directly regulate the nervous system, providing embodied foundations for DBT's distress tolerance and physiological emotion regulation.
Asana (physical postures) and pranayama (breath regulation) in Patanjali's framework are far more than physical exercises—they are tools for regulating the mind through deliberate work with the body and breath. The Yoga Sutras recognize that mental dysregulation manifests as and is maintained by physical tension and disordered breathing patterns. For those with emotional dysregulation, this body-based approach proves essential: often when emotions overwhelm cognitive resources, the body becomes the most accessible intervention point. DBT incorporates this wisdom through the TIPP skill and opposite action practices. Specific breathing patterns directly influence nervous system activation: slow, extended exhales activate the parasympathetic nervous system, while rapid breathing intensifies arousal. Asana practice develops both somatic awareness and capacity to hold challenging states without reactivity. Patanjali teaches that through disciplined work with body and breath, the mind becomes stable and clear. For those in emotional dysregulation, learning to use the breath to downregulate arousal, or to use movement to discharge accumulated tension, provides both immediate relief and long-term nervous system retraining. The body becomes an ally rather than a source of dysregulation.
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