The Yoga Sutras' ethical self-disciplines provide structured principles for behavioral change, habit formation, and emotional regulation central to CBT interventions.
Niyama encompasses five personal disciplines: saucha (purity/clarity), santosha (contentment), tapas (discipline/effort), svadhyaya (self-study), and ishvara pranidhana (surrender). These practical principles address the "how" of sustained behavioral change that CBT requires. Saucha involves clearing unhelpful thoughts and creating mental clarity—foundational for cognitive restructuring. Santosha addresses the perfectionism and rigid expectations that fuel anxiety and depression. Tapas provides philosophical grounding for sustained effort in behavior change despite discomfort. Svadhyaya directly parallels CBT's self-monitoring and thought records, emphasizing systematic self-observation. Ishvara pranidhana teaches acceptance of limitations and values-alignment, crucial for exposure therapy and behavioral activation. Together, the niyamas offer a comprehensive ethical-practical framework for psychological transformation. Introducing these principles helps clients understand behavioral change not as forced compliance but as deliberate cultivation of health-promoting disciplines.
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