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Concept
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The Vritti-Pattern Recognition Method

Using Patanjali's taxonomy of five vritti types to map specific emotional dysregulation patterns, enabling targeted DBT skill selection.

Patan
Why It Matters

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.

Helpful guides
Patan
Mental Health
Peri
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