Patanjali's principle of surrendering outcomes to something greater supports DBT's radical acceptance—releasing futile control struggles over unchangeable emotional pain.
Ishvara pranidhana—surrender to a higher intelligence or force—is Patanjali's ninth niyama (personal discipline). This doesn't require religious belief but rather recognition that absolute control over emotions is impossible and attempting it amplifies suffering. DBT's radical acceptance mirrors ishvara pranidhana: acknowledging that some pain is inevitable, that emotional dysregulation sometimes occurs despite best efforts, and that fighting these facts creates secondary suffering. Patanjali teaches that liberation emerges not from controlling the uncontrollable but from surrendering false control and aligning with reality's actual conditions. For emotionally dysregulated individuals, this framework prevents the exhausting struggle against their own nervous system. Radical acceptance—accepting what is while still working toward change—echoes Patanjali's wisdom that surrender and effort paradoxically coexist. The Yoga Sutras suggest that much dysregulation stems from refusing what is. Ishvara pranidhana teaches practitioners to direct effort toward what they can actually influence while accepting what they cannot, reducing the emotional load of impossible battles.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.