Patanjali's ethical precepts establish behavioral and psychological foundations that prevent dysregulation, including honesty, non-harm, self-discipline, and contentment.
Before advanced practices, Patanjali prescribes yama (ethical restraint toward others) and niyama (ethical observances toward self). These include ahimsa (non-harm), satya (truthfulness), brahmacharya (wise energy use), and aparigraha (non-grasping), plus self-discipline, purity, contentment, self-study, and surrender. Emotional dysregulation often stems from or is amplified by ethical violations: betraying others creates shame and anxiety; dishonesty fragments the self; self-harm and addictive behaviors dysregulate further. DBT's behavioral component implicitly addresses yama-niyama through skills like distress tolerance and values clarification. A person practicing satya stops the internal lies that fuel dysregulation ("I'm worthless," "no one will help"). Practicing ahimsa toward self replaces self-injury with TIPP skills. Contentment (santosha) reduces the constant craving-aversion cycle that dysregulates. These aren't separate from emotion regulation; they're its foundation. DBT's biosocial theory acknowledges environmental and relational factors; yama-niyama provides a framework for addressing one's behavioral contribution to dysregulation.
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