Dialectical Behavior Therapy

What is DBT?
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Dialectical Behavior Therapy, or DBT, is a structured, skills-based therapy designed to help people manage intense emotions, reduce impulsive behaviors, and improve relationships. DBT was originally developed to treat individuals who struggled with emotional dysregulation and self-destructive behaviors, but it is now widely used for anxiety, depression, trauma-related symptoms, and addiction.

The word “dialectical” means balancing two things that seem opposite. In DBT, that balance is acceptance and change. You learn to accept your emotions without judgment while also building the skills to respond differently. Instead of feeling out of control, DBT helps you pause, regulate, and choose your next step with intention.

How Dialectical Behavior Therapy Works

DBT focuses on four core skill areas: mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotional regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness. These skills work together to help you respond rather than react.

Here’s what DBT often looks like in real life:

  • You notice and name what you are feeling in the moment
  • You use grounding or distress tolerance skills to prevent escalation
  • You identify what the emotion is asking for
  • You choose a response that aligns with your long-term goals instead of short-term relief


DBT helps slow down emotional surges before they turn into arguments, shutdowns, panic, or substance use. Over time, these skills strengthen your ability to stay steady during stress instead of feeling controlled by it.

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DBT in Addiction Treatment

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Addiction and emotional dysregulation often overlap. Many people use substances to numb pain, escape stress, or quiet emotions. DBT in addiction treatment helps you build safer ways to cope when emotions spike.

Instead of reacting to cravings or urges automatically, DBT teaches you to:

  • identify emotional triggers behind substance use
  • use distress tolerance skills when cravings feel intense
  • separate temporary urges from long-term values
  • reduce shame-driven thinking after setbacks
  • build routines that support stability and accountability


DBT is especially helpful when relapse is tied to relationship conflict, mood swings, or impulsive decisions. At
Rooted Stillness, DBT can be part of outpatient therapy and may also work alongside higher levels of care, including virtual IOP, depending on your needs.

DBT for Mental Health

DBT for mental health is commonly used when emotions feel draining or unpredictable. It supports people struggling with anxiety, depression, mood instability, trauma-related stress, and patterns of self-criticism.

For anxiety, DBT often focuses on:

grounding skills to reduce emotional flooding

tolerating uncertainty without spiraling

responding to fear without avoidance

For depression, DBT often focuses on:

reducing emotional shutdown

increasing structured daily actions

challenging all-or-nothing thinking

For trauma-related symptoms, DBT can help with:

managing triggers safely

reducing emotional reactivity

building internal stability before deeper trauma processing

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Benefits of DBT Therapy

The biggest benefits of DBT therapy are that it is practical and skill-focused. You leave sessions with tools you can apply immediately.

Many people appreciate DBT because it is:

  • structured but supportive
  • clear without being rigid
  • focused on emotional regulation and relationship repair
  • effective for both mental health and substance use concerns


DBT also improves communication skills, which can reduce conflict at home and strengthen boundaries in personal and professional relationships.

Why DBT Works

DBT works because it targets the emotional intensity that often drives impulsive behavior. When emotions feel unmanageable, people tend to act quickly for relief. DBT interrupts that cycle.

It works well because it:

builds distress tolerance for high-stress moments

strengthens emotional awareness and regulation

reduces impulsive or reactive decision-making

balances self-acceptance with meaningful change

Like CBT, DBT relies on repetition and practice. The more consistently you use the skills, the more stable your responses become. Over time, emotional spikes feel less draining and recovery feels more sustainable.

Start DBT Therapy at Rooted Stillness in Irvine

If anxiety, depression, or addiction patterns have started to take control, Dialectical Behavior Therapy can help you regain stability and confidence. Rooted Stillness in Irvine, California offers support from licensed therapists and board-certified psychiatric professionals when appropriate, with options that fit real schedules. Call Rooted Stillness Today!

People Also Ask

What is DBT and how does it work?

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is a skills-based therapy that helps manage intense emotions, reduce impulsive behaviors, and improve relationships. It works by teaching mindfulness, emotional regulation, distress tolerance, and communication skills to support mental health and addiction recovery.

The four core DBT skills are:

  1. Mindfulness
  2. Distress Tolerance
  3. Emotional Regulation

Interpersonal Effectiveness

DBT may not be ideal for individuals who do not want structured, skills-based therapy or are unwilling to practice techniques between sessions.

DBT exercises include grounding techniques, deep breathing, the STOP skill, Opposite Action, and communication tools like DEAR MAN.

A typical DBT session lasts 45–60 minutes, while skills groups may run 90 minutes to 2 hours.