Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Chitta Vritti Nirodhah: Stilling Mental Turbulence

The yogic practice of observing and quieting mental fluctuations, directly paralleling DBT's distress tolerance skills for emotional dysregulation.

Patan
Why It Matters

Patanjali defines yoga as "chitta vritti nirodhah"—the cessation of mental modifications. This foundational concept teaches that emotional dysregulation stems from unchecked mental patterns and reactivity. Rather than suppressing emotions, this tradition cultivates witness consciousness: observing thoughts and feelings without identification or judgment. In DBT, this mirrors distress tolerance and mindfulness—creating space between stimulus and response. When emotional dysregulation triggers reactive patterns, Patanjali's framework offers a systematic approach: recognize the vritti (mental wave), observe its nature without resistance, and gradually establish stability through disciplined practice. This transforms emotional turbulence from something that controls us into phenomena we can witness with equanimity, reducing the suffering component of emotional pain and creating the psychological distance necessary for skillful response rather than dysregulated reactivity.

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Mental Health
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