Patanjali's principle of aligning action with higher purpose supports DBT's values clarification work, transforming dysregulation management from obligation into meaningful, purposeful practice.
Ishvara pranidhana—dedication of action to a higher purpose or ultimate reality—invites practitioners to align daily practice with values transcending immediate emotional comfort. In DBT terms, this transforms skills practice from duty or crisis response into purposeful, values-aligned living. Someone with emotional dysregulation practicing distress tolerance solely to survive another day experiences it differently than one aligned with a deeper purpose: protecting a valued relationship, maintaining integrity, or embodying resilience. Patanjali teaches that actions infused with purposeful dedication generate their own momentum and satisfaction, naturally sustaining practice through difficulty. Applied to DBT, ishvara pranidhana suggests clarifying what meaningful life looks like despite emotional dysregulation, then engaging skills as expressions of that value. This isn't spiritual bypassing—it doesn't minimize emotional pain—but rather provides the psychological fuel for sustained practice. For someone chronically dysregulated, discovering that their struggle-management could serve a valued purpose (parenting presence, creative contribution, authentic relationship) reframes skills practice as an expression of self-love and life-commitment rather than burden, significantly increasing engagement and effectiveness.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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