Using Patanjali's taxonomy of five vritti types to map specific emotional dysregulation patterns, enabling targeted DBT skill selection.
Patanjali identifies five categories of mental fluctuation: correct knowledge, misperception, imagination, sleep, and memory. This taxonomy provides a sophisticated diagnostic lens for emotional dysregulation. A client experiencing shame spirals may be caught in misperception-vritti (false beliefs about self-worth); panic attacks might reflect imagination-vritti (catastrophic future-projection). DBT's multifaceted approach works precisely because different dysregulation patterns require different skills. Recognizing a vritti's type guides appropriate intervention: misperception requires cognitive-behavioral checking, imagination needs distress tolerance and mindfulness, memory-based reactivity benefits from emotion regulation history-work. This Patanjalian framework prevents the common DBT implementation error of generic skill assignment. By training clients to recognize their characteristic vritti-patterns—"When I'm dysregulated, I'm usually caught in future catastrophizing versus self-judgment"—they develop metacognitive awareness and agency. The practice bridges ancient philosophy and modern psychology, making DBT more precise, personalized, and psychologically coherent.
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