Patanjali's eight-stage model of deepening concentration mirrors DBT's gradual skill mastery from crisis management to stable emotional baseline.
Patanjali describes samadhi—integrated equanimity—as the culmination of yoga practice, reached through eight progressive limbs. This model offers emotionally dysregulated clients a map: emotional stability isn't an all-or-nothing state but a progressively deepening capacity. Early samadhi stages reflect DBT's acute crisis management—using distress tolerance when emotions are overwhelming. Middle stages correspond to skill integration—mindfulness and emotion regulation becoming more automatic. Advanced stages represent the stable, resilient emotional life that DBT aims toward. This framework prevents demoralization; clients recognize that initial progress using skills in crisis situations is genuine advancement, not failure because full stability hasn't arrived. Patanjali's model legitimizes the nonlinear emotional journey, showing that concentration deepens in layers. Each DBT module—mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation, interpersonal effectiveness—represents a stage of samadhi, building toward integrated emotional mastery.
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