The ethical precepts and observances that establish psychological stability and interpersonal functioning, foundational to behavioral change in CBT.
Patanjali's yama and niyama—ethical restraints and observances—form the foundation of yoga practice, establishing behavioral and psychological stability before advanced practices become meaningful. The yamas include non-violence, truthfulness, non-stealing, chastity, and non-possessiveness; the niyamas include purity, contentment, discipline, self-study, and surrender. These aren't arbitrary moral rules but recognized prerequisites for psychological functioning and relational health. In CBT terms, yama and niyama parallel behavioral foundations: clients cannot effectively challenge cognitive distortions while engaging in destructive behaviors, just as ethical living creates the stability necessary for deeper psychological work. The framework suggests that psychological treatment must often begin with behavioral modification addressing relationships, honesty, and self-care before cognitive work becomes fully effective. For clients struggling with trauma, addiction, or relational patterns, yama-niyama principles provide grounding in basic functional behaviors that establish safety and stability. This yogic approach validates that sustainable psychological healing requires behavioral and ethical foundations, not just cognitive insight alone.
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