Periagoge
Concept
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Pratyahara: Sense Withdrawal and Internal Attunement

Pratyahara's practice of withdrawing attention from external stimuli and directing it inward is foundational for developing the internal awareness required for parts work.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves consciously withdrawing sensory attention from external objects and redirecting it toward internal experience. Rather than being pulled into reactivity by the outer world, consciousness turns inward with deliberate focus. This is precisely the skill required to begin parts work: developing the ability to notice internal voices, sensations, and patterns beneath the noise of daily life and external demands. Without pratyahara, parts remain unconscious—we are acted upon rather than aware participants in our own psychology. Patanjali teaches that this withdrawal is not escape but refinement; attention becomes more sensitive and discerning. In IFS, pratyahara enables the foundational shift from external focus (blaming others, reactivity) to internal focus (curiosity about parts). It creates the quiet internal space where different parts can be heard and honored. Clients learn to pause the external stimulus response and listen inward, discovering the rich complexity of their inner system and the wisdom available through that attunement.

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