Patanjali's niyama of contentment (santosha) informs CBT's acceptance-based techniques, helping clients release rigid demands about how reality should be and adapt flexibly to what is.
Santosha, one of Patanjali's niyamas or internal practices, teaches acceptance and contentment with present circumstances while continuing to work toward growth. This principle addresses a fundamental source of psychological suffering that CBT targets: rigid, absolutistic thinking exemplified by 'shoulds,' 'musts,' and demands that reality conform to expectations. Many clients suffer not from their circumstances but from their refusal to accept reality as it is. Depression deepens when clients demand they 'should feel happy'; anxiety intensifies when they insist 'I must not be anxious.' Santosha teaches a middle path: accepting current reality while maintaining motivation for positive change. Modern CBT incorporates this through acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) techniques, behavioral activation despite low mood, and exposure despite anxiety. The practice of santosha involves cognitive flexibility—updating the thought 'This shouldn't be happening' to 'This is happening; how do I respond skillfully?' This shift from resistance to acceptance paradoxically reduces suffering and increases agency. By integrating Patanjali's santosha wisdom, CBT practitioners help clients achieve peaceful effectiveness.
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