The yoga practice of consciously withdrawing attention from external triggers; a powerful technique to interrupt anxiety spirals and regain inner control.
Pratyahara, the conscious withdrawal of the senses from external stimuli, is the fifth limb of yoga and a direct tool for anxiety management. When anxious, we become hypersensitive to threat-signals: every news headline, every social media post, every physical sensation feels significant and dangerous. Pratyahara teaches you to consciously disengage the senses from these inputs, creating an inner sanctuary of calm. This is not dissociation or unhealthy avoidance; it's conscious choice and discernment about what you expose your nervous system to. Practical pratyahara includes closing your eyes, limiting media consumption, reducing sensory overstimulation, and practicing focused attention inward during meditation. For anxiety sufferers, pratyahara is liberating: you realize you have agency over what captures your attention. By withdrawing your senses from anxiety-amplifying stimuli and redirecting them inward, you interrupt the feedback loop. Pratyahara teaches that anxiety cannot sustain itself without the external 'food' of attention; starve it of attention, and it naturally diminishes.
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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