International Day of Yoga

June 22, 2026

Yoga Philosophy in Psychotherapy by Alexis Cabrera



Yoga has been bastardized and commodified like a California Roll in American sushi.

Everywhere you go, you have fat-free supermodels hyperflexible, advertising a “peace of mind”

through meditation and mimosas, paddleboarding goats, and long winded speeches about

Mercury’s retrograde.

The reality of these descriptions, much like the mayonnaise in a California roll, is that none of

them are actual Yoga.

Yoga is the calculated practice of achieving pure consciousness. It correlates with

psychotherapy in many ways, when dialed down to its essence. The stilling of the mind is the

practice of yoga, and in psychotherapy, we examine our thoughts to uphold our present and

natural experience without stress or tension.

What yoga techniques are actually psychotherapeutic techniques?

In the licensing examination for the psychoanalytic board of California, one test question is:

“When a patient experiences high anxiety, what is a valuable recommendation?” A B C or D: a

yoga class.

Answer is D. But why?

Yoga links the body to breath. When we become mindful of our breathing, we are able to calm

the thoughts and restore our autonomic nervous system to regulation. This is known as

“pranayama,” or “breath regulation” in English. The breath is an aspect of our lived experience

that can be conscious or unconscious, and in this, Hindus understand it as the bridge to the

subconscious. It can be yours as well.

When human beings are in distress, breath can become accelerated and shallow. Our triggers

in life cause us to respond by tensing. For example, going home to a stressful family may be

something you dread. When we think about our stressful situations, we forget to breathe. This is

because the sympathetic nervous system goes into “fight or flight” mode (now featuring Fawn

and Forget, my new favorites- where you can either fight your mom, fly away from her, fawn

over her so she knows she is the dominant one in the house, or forget everything painful

happened through ptsd-amnesia reactions) because the body is trying to protect itself from

danger. Most of the patients in therapy enter without any sense that they are triggered and

unconsciously not breathing.

What is your breath like right now as you read this?

What if you deepened it by breathing slightly longer through your nose, with your mouth closed?


This simple pivot in breathing is what CBT and DBT therapists utilize to assist clients in

overcoming triggering scenarios in their daily lives. When the mind visualizes a stressful

situation, the brain often cannot discern between danger that’s really happening and one that is

being imagined. So when I worry about my mom, my body breathes more shallow. I tense up.

However, it is only through years of mindfulness and physical awareness that I am able to

detect this difference. When I gain that consciousness, I can CHOOSE to slow down my breath.

This is a pranayama exercise that supports mental, physical, and emotional well being on a

long-term scale. It is an anti anxiety medication that is free with no long term detrimental

symptoms. And the wise ancestors of our past have enabled it to you. No mayonnaise required.

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