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Concept
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Avidya: Fundamental Misperception and Emotional Roots

The yogic concept of fundamental ignorance that generates emotional reactivity, providing context for understanding dysregulation's deeper origins.

Patan
Why It Matters

Avidya, often translated as ignorance or delusion, is Patanjali's root cause of suffering. It's not intellectual ignorance but fundamental misperception of reality: seeing separation where unity exists, permanence in impermanent things, and self in the non-self. For emotional dysregulation, avidya manifests as core beliefs: "I am broken," "Others will abandon me," "I cannot tolerate pain." These misperceptions generate chronic emotional reactivity. DBT's schema work and cognitive restructuring address avidya. The Yoga Sutras teach that avidya isn't cured through blame or willpower but through systematic, patient inquiry into one's deepest assumptions. Dysregulated individuals often operate from fundamental beliefs developed in trauma or adverse childhood experiences—these are avidya. Patanjali's framework offers both diagnosis and method: identify the core misperception, examine it through direct experience and reasoning, and gradually replace it with accurate perception. Unlike Surface-level distraction, avidya-work engages the root. For DBT clients, recognizing that dysregulation stems partly from fundamental misperception (not character flaw) enables deeper therapeutic work and reduces shame while supporting transformative change.

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