Patanjali's foundational principle of stilling mental fluctuations directly parallels DBT's distress tolerance skills for interrupting emotional reactivity.
Patanjali defines yoga as "chitta vritti nirodha"—the cessation of mental fluctuations. This ancient framework maps precisely onto DBT's core challenge: interrupting the automatic cascade of emotional dysregulation. Rather than suppressing emotion, both traditions teach observation and gentle redirection of the mind's turbulent patterns. In DBT, distress tolerance skills (TIPP, self-soothing) function as practical vritti-stoppers, creating psychological space between stimulus and response. Patanjali's systematic approach recognizes that dysregulation stems from mental identification with fleeting sensations; DBT's opposite action and mindfulness skills cultivate the same detachment. Understanding emotional dysregulation as "vritti" reframes it not as pathology but as natural mental activity requiring skillful management, reducing shame while building the observer consciousness essential for lasting emotional regulation.
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