Patanjali's practice of sensory withdrawal and redirection applied to noticing subtle physical and emotional cues that activate insecure attachment responses.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves consciously withdrawing attention from external stimuli to observe internal sensation. This practice directly addresses attachment work's challenge: recognizing the somatic markers of insecurity. Attachment triggers often activate below conscious awareness—a tone of voice, a delayed text, a fleeting facial expression—before we react defensively. Pratyahara trains the capacity to notice these subtle signals: the tightening in the chest signaling abandonment fear, the coolness in the body signaling avoidant shutdown, the fragmentation signaling disorganized distress. By bringing attention inward with Patanjali's systematic method, we interrupt automatic reactivity and create choice. This sensory awareness allows attachment workers to understand their unique nervous system signature—how abandonment fear, shame, or disconnection register somatically. Once we can feel these patterns arising, we can apply other yogic tools to metabolize them rather than acting them out in relationships. Pratyahara thus becomes foundational: we cannot change what we cannot sense.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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