Does Dialectical Behavior Therapy Work?

A man looking distressed with his head in his hands

In high stress moments, it’s common for emotions to feel intense and the space between feeling and acting seems too narrow. Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is a skills-based therapy grounded in mindfulness and behavioral change, and developed for helping with mental health conditions that cause intense emotions and have difficulty with emotional regulation skills such as borderline personality disorder or people with suicidal behaviors. DBT focuses on teaching people how to manage intense emotional states and how to tolerate distress without escalating it. 

At Oak & Sands Counselling Services, DBT therapy is offered as part of individual therapy, trauma therapy, couples counselling, group therapy, and work with teens and families. Our mental health professionals work to integrate these healthy coping skills based on the ways that it fits each person’s needs. The sections below explore how Dialectical behavior Therapy works and why it can be especially helpful when emotions feel overwhelming or hard to manage.

When and How to Use Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Why DBT Helps When Emotions Take Over

Dialectical behavior Therapy starts with a practical understanding of your behavioral skills and interpersonal effectiveness. The ways you react now were learned over time, often in response to stress or environments that felt unsafe or unpredictable. Those reactions made sense then. The problem is that they may still show up even when they create more harm than relief. 

In DBT, clients are supported and taken seriously, while also learning how to develop skills to slow reactions, tolerate distress, and respond differently in real situations. Over time, people begin to notice more space between what they feel and what they do, which allows for steadier and more intentional choices.

What the Dialectical Lens Changes

The dialectical framework teaches people to hold opposing truths without collapsing into extremes. For example, someone can want closeness and also feel threatened by it. A parent can love their child deeply and feel depleted by the demands of caregiving. Understanding that having these polarizing emotions at the same time are valid and okay reduces the grip of black and white judgments that often fuel conflict. 

How DBT Skills Show Up in Daily Life

DBT skills training is designed for ordinary stress points, using practices such as core mindfulness skills to build awareness before reactions escalate, distress tolerance skills that create breathing room during moments that feel unmanageable, and emotion regulation to help clients focus on patterns over time. These interpersonal skills support clearer communication, which is why DBT often complements Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and couples work.

Why Progress Matters More Than Precision

In DBT, change shows up in real moments, not in perfect use of skills. An imperfect response that slows things down during a difficult interaction is often more helpful than a skill that only makes sense in theory.

For those navigating intense emotional distress, including experiences tied to post-traumatic stress disorder, major depressive disorder, or eating disorders, many DBT skills can feel out of reach when emotions are high. Working with a therapist helps people practice in context and adjust what is not working, especially when past experiences or family dynamics intensify reactions.

Progress is rarely linear. Pausing before responding may happen inconsistently at first, but even small shifts can reduce escalation and support steadier responses over time.

Speak With a DBT Therapist at Oak & Sands 

Dialectical behavior Therapy is about building steadier ground when emotions run high and patterns feel hard to shift. At Oak & Sands Counselling Services, DBT-informed care is offered alongside EMDR, couples therapy, and counselling for children, teens, and adults, allowing treatment to be shaped around the person. Sessions are available in Alliston and online across Ontario. If you are ready to explore support that feels practical, grounded, and human, we invite you to reach out and start the conversation.

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How Does Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Work?

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What Are the Six Main Points of Dialectical Behavior Therapy?