The yoga practice of sustained concentration, foundational to DBT mindfulness skills and emotional regulation through directed attention.
Dharana, the sixth yoga limb, is concentration—sustained, unwavering focus on a chosen object or process. In dysregulation, attention scatters across catastrophic thoughts, bodily sensations, and emotional spirals. Dharana directly counters this fragmentation. Patanjali teaches that dharana is not forceful but gradual, patient attention-training. In DBT, mindfulness is partly dharana: observing the breath, sensations, or a single emotion with gentle focus. When dysregulated, the mind feels uncontrollable; dharana offers a pathway back to agency through controlled attention. This is subtly different from willpower or suppression—dharana is about choosing what to attend to with compassion. The practice builds the neural capacity for sustained attention, gradually lengthening the window between trigger and response. For someone with emotional dysregulation, dharana-based mindfulness practice quite literally rewires attention circuits. Patanjali's insight that concentration develops gradually through repeated practice matches neuroscientific understanding of neuroplasticity. By practicing dharana through DBT mindfulness exercises, practitioners develop the attentional stability that underlies all emotion regulation.
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