Patanjali's concept of tapas (disciplined heat or effort) describes the transformative friction required in CBT for cognitive and behavioral change.
Tapas, often translated as inner heat or austerity, represents the purposeful friction and sustained effort necessary for psychological transformation in Patanjali's system. Rather than seeking comfort, tapas embraces the productive discomfort of change—directly parallel to CBT's principle of behavioral activation and exposure therapy. When clients engage in cognitive restructuring, face avoided situations, or examine uncomfortable beliefs, they generate psychological tapas, the heat of transformation. Patanjali teaches that this sustained effort burns away mental impurities and false patterns, much as exposure gradually extinguishes anxiety through repeated, systematic contact with feared experiences. Tapas acknowledges that meaningful change involves temporary discomfort; avoidance-based relief strategies merely postpone transformation while perpetuating suffering. In CBT practice, clients discover that willingness to tolerate cognitive and emotional discomfort paradoxically accelerates healing. By reframing therapeutic homework and exposure exercises as expressions of tapas—purposeful, dignified effort toward liberation—practitioners help clients embrace the productive difficulty inherent in psychological work, building self-efficacy and commitment to values-aligned living despite inevitable discomfort.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.