Patanjali's breath control practices provide a somatic-physiological tool for emotion regulation that DBT incorporates into distress tolerance and crisis skills.
Pranayama—conscious breath regulation—bridges physiology and psychology in ways that modern emotion science increasingly validates. Patanjali taught that breath patterns and mental states are inextricably linked; controlling breath influences consciousness. DBT's distress tolerance skills (especially paced breathing and box breathing) operationalize pranayama for emotional dysregulation. When dysregulation activates the sympathetic nervous system, deliberate breath control activates parasympathetic counterbalance. Pranayama offers immediate, portable interventions for acute emotional crises without requiring cognitive resources. Unlike talk-based skills that struggle during intense dysregulation, breath work engages the body's regulatory mechanisms directly. For clients with trauma or dissociation, pranayama provides somatic grounding. Patanjali's ancient understanding of breath as the bridge between involuntary physiology and voluntary consciousness provides theoretical depth to DBT's pragmatic breathing interventions, positioning them not as mere distraction but as sophisticated nervous system regulation.
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