Patanjali's foundational concept that the mind's fluctuations can be stilled, directly paralleling DBT's goal of managing emotional reactivity through deliberate mental discipline.
Chitta vritti nirodhah—the cessation of mental fluctuations—is Patanjali's definition of yoga itself. This ancient principle addresses the root of emotional dysregulation: the mind's tendency to amplify, distort, and react to emotional stimuli. Rather than suppressing emotions, Patanjali teaches observing the mind's patterns without identification, mirroring DBT's distress tolerance skills. By recognizing that emotional turbulence is a natural function of the mind rather than a personal failure, practitioners develop equanimity. This reframes dysregulation not as pathology but as vritti—a wave of consciousness that, when observed skillfully, loses its grip. DBT's mindfulness component directly echoes this: neither suppression nor indulgence, but witnessing. For those struggling with emotion dysregulation, this concept offers both philosophical dignity and practical pathway: emotions are mental movements, observable and workable, not permanent truths about oneself.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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