What Are the Six Main Points of Dialectical Behavior Therapy?

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), was developed for people who experience intense emotions and have difficulty with emotional regulation. It is most often associated with borderline personality disorder, though it is widely used with teens, adults, couples, and families facing emotional reactivity, relationship strain, trauma, and mood-related concerns. 

At Oak & Sands Counselling Services in Alliston, DBT principles are woven into work across many areas, including EMDR, couples counselling, and counselling for children and teens. Most clients do not arrive asking for DBT by name. They arrive feeling reactive or unsure why certain moments derail them so quickly. Understanding what are the six main points of dialectical behavior therapy offers clarity around why this approach is so effective across different ages and presenting concerns.

Six Core Principles of Dialectical Behavioral Therapy 

Mindfulness as a way of being present 

In DBT, we use mindfulness as a practice to focus on noticing what is happening in real time in the present moment without trying to fix or suppress it. It allows you to observe and track you thoughts and emotions shifts, and name any physical sensations. This skill is especially helpful for people who move quickly from feeling to action and need help with their emotion regulation skills. Mindfulness slows that process of managing intense emotions and introduces choice, which often marks the beginning of meaningful change.  

Distress tolerance skills during painful moments

Some experiences bring discomfort that cannot be resolved immediately. Distress tolerance skills address how to get through those moments without creating additional harm. This work matters for people who rely on impulsive actions or self-criticism when distress spikes. Dialectical Behavior Therapy offers concrete ways to remain steady until the intensity passes, allowing mental health challenges to be addressed later from a calmer place.

Learning how emotions actually work

Emotion regulation in DBT focuses on understanding emotional patterns rather than fighting them. Clients learn why certain feelings arrive so forcefully and what conditions make emotional responses harder to manage. Sleep disruption, chronic stress, trauma history, and relationship dynamics all play a role. This work often complements trauma-focused therapies such as EMDR and integrates well with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, particularly for adults who feel governed by mood shifts.

Navigating relationships with more clarity

Interpersonal effectiveness addresses the strain that builds when needs go unspoken or conflict escalates too quickly. DBT focuses on communication that protects self-respect while remaining connected to others. This is especially relevant in couples counselling, family therapy, and work with teens who are learning how to advocate for themselves. Clients begin to approach difficult conversations with greater steadiness and fewer regrets afterward.

Holding acceptance and change together

Dialectics refers to the ability to hold opposing truths at the same time. In DBT, this often means radical acceptance of reality as it is while working toward meaningful change. Clients discover that self-acceptance supports the process and helps reduce shame and loosen rigid thinking patterns that tend to keep people stuck, allowing your emotional well being to grow and heal.

Feeling understood as a foundation for growth

Validation plays a central role in DBT. It involves recognizing internal experiences as real and worthy of attention. Validation does not mean agreement, nor does it excuse harmful behavior. It creates safety. In work with children, teens, and families, validation often changes the emotional tone of therapy before any skill is introduced. Feeling understood makes change possible.

Moving forward with support

Understanding the six DBT skills and what are the six main points of dialectical behavior therapy helps explain why this approach remains widely used across mental health care. 

At Oak & Sands Counselling Services, these principles inform work with individuals, couples, families, men, women, and children, both in person in Alliston and through virtual therapy across Ontario. If you are considering counselling and want a grounded, experienced starting point, you can contact us and learn more today.

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Cognitive Behavioral Therapy vs Dialectical Behavioral Therapy