Patanjali's principle of steady ease in posture teaches the core DBT skill of maintaining distress tolerance—grounded stability amid emotional pain.
Patanjali's Yoga Sutra 2.46—"sthira sukham asanam"—prescribes that postures should embody both sthira (steadiness, strength) and sukha (ease, comfort). This principle transcends physical yoga and becomes essential DBT philosophy: emotional resilience requires simultaneous stability and gentleness. In distress tolerance, practitioners learn to remain present (sthira) with painful emotions without collapsing into crisis behavior, while also cultivating self-compassion (sukha) to prevent secondary suffering. Many dysregulated individuals oscillate between rigid control and chaotic overwhelm, missing this middle path. Patanjali's dual principle teaches that strength and softness coexist in mature functioning. Applied to DBT's TIPP skills, distraction, or opposite action, this framework prevents practitioners from white-knuckling through distress; instead, they ground themselves while allowing natural emotional movement. The Yoga Sutras offer ancient validation that surviving difficult emotions requires neither armor nor dissolution but the integrated stance of sthira sukham: strong yet supple.
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