The yogic practice of intentional sensory withdrawal that recalibrates the vagal system's responsiveness to external threat cues.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves consciously withdrawing attention from external stimuli and proprioceptively gathering the senses inward. This practice directly addresses polyvagal dysregulation by interrupting the automatic scanning for danger signals that maintain sympathetic activation. When the vagal system becomes hypervigilant—constantly monitoring the environment through the dorsal vagal or sympathetic branches—pratyahara creates sanctuary within. By systematically releasing attention from external inputs, practitioners reset the vagal brake and reduce neuroception of threat. This ancient technique predates modern nervous system science yet operates on identical principles: when external stimuli no longer command attention, the vagus nerve downregulates defensive postures. Pratyahara becomes a practical technology for giving the nervous system permission to rest, restoring the ventral vagal capacity for peaceful presence and social connection.
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