Pratyahara (sensory withdrawal and internal observation) cultivates the capacity to observe attachment triggers without reactive collapse or defensive shutdown.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, develops the ability to withdraw attention from external stimuli and observe internal experience. In attachment work, pratyahara trains the nervous system to notice triggers—a partner's tone of voice, a text message delay, separation anxiety—without immediately reacting. Insecurely attached individuals often hijack into survival responses: fight (protest behavior), flight (avoidance), or freeze (dissociation). Pratyahara creates a witnessing space between stimulus and response, allowing prefrontal awareness to activate. This mirrors polyvagal theory and somatic approaches to attachment healing: by developing internal witness consciousness, we gain choice in how we respond to relational stress. The practice teaches that triggers are information, not truth. We can feel the anxiety activation while simultaneously observing it, gradually building tolerance for the discomfort that secure attachment requires us to metabolize.
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