The yogic principle of truthfulness (satya) informs CBT's emphasis on cognitive accuracy and honest self-assessment in psychological change.
Satya, truthfulness and authenticity, stands as a foundational ethical principle in Patanjali's Yoga Sutras and directly supports CBT's commitment to reality-testing and cognitive accuracy. In yoga, satya means aligning words, thoughts, and actions with objective reality—a practice inseparable from genuine psychological health. CBT operationalizes satya through cognitive restructuring, where clients examine evidence for and against distorted thoughts, progressively replacing auto-piloted falsehoods with evidence-based cognitions. This process honors the yogic principle that liberation arises from accurate perception rather than comforting delusions. Patanjali teaches that satya builds psychological integrity and social harmony, reflecting CBT's finding that honest self-appraisal and authentic communication strengthen relationships and reduce anxiety. By framing cognitive work through satya's lens, practitioners help clients understand that temporary relief from avoidance pales compared to the sustainable freedom of truthful living. This philosophical grounding transforms CBT from an instrumental technique into a values-based practice where clients consciously choose alignment with reality, building psychological resilience, authentic relationships, and earned self-respect through committed truth-seeking.
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