Patanjali's principle of surrendering to a larger process beyond individual ego-control addresses CBT's challenge of balancing effort with acceptance.
Ishvara Pranidhana—surrender to a higher intelligence or process beyond personal control—represents Patanjali's invitation to balance individual effort (abhyasa) with trust in forces larger than ego. This addresses a subtle but critical challenge in CBT: clients often apply rigid, forceful control strategies that paradoxically maintain their problems. Over-control of thoughts, excessive safety behaviors, and compulsive checking all reflect the belief that the individual must manage everything. Patanjali's principle suggests that genuine transformation requires both committed effort and trusting something beyond individual willpower. In CBT terms, this includes trusting the neurobiological capacity for habituation, trusting that anxiety naturally subsides when not fed by avoidance, and trusting the body's inherent regulation capacities. This doesn't mean passivity; rather, it's the balance between skillful effort and wise letting-go. Clients who learn to apply effort while simultaneously releasing the need to control outcomes often experience breakthrough changes that forcing alone never achieves.
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.