The yoga principles of truthfulness and non-harm that guide skillful interpersonal expression, directly applicable to DBT's interpersonal effectiveness and emotion regulation in relationships.
Among Patanjali's yamas (ethical precepts), satya (truthfulness) and ahimsa (non-harm) address the crucial intersection of authenticity and compassion. Emotional dysregulation frequently manifests interpersonally as either explosive expression that violates ahimsa or suppressed authenticity that violates satya. The Yoga Sutras teach that both extremes create suffering and relational deterioration. Satya alone without ahimsa becomes weaponized honesty; ahimsa alone without satya becomes protective dishonesty. For those with emotional dysregulation in relationships, this integration becomes essential. DBT's interpersonal effectiveness module directly applies these principles through skills like DEAR MAN (expressing needs truthfully), GIVE (maintaining relationships with compassion), and FAST (maintaining self-respect through honest communication). When dysregulation hijacks communication, both satya and ahimsa collapse: either harsh, unfiltered expression emerges or complete emotional shutdown occurs. Patanjali's teaching that these principles must be held together addresses this directly. Through emotional regulation skills and mindfulness, DBT practitioners develop the internal stability necessary to speak truth compassionately. Satya and ahimsa together represent the integration of authentic self-expression with genuine care for others—a capacity essential for healthy relationships and emotional resilience.
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