The practice of withdrawing attention from external stimuli and redirecting it inward—addressing how anxiety feeds on external information and habituation to worry cycles.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves consciously withdrawing the senses from external stimuli and turning attention inward. For anxiety sufferers, this practice addresses a critical challenge: excessive sensitivity to environmental triggers and information streams that fuel worry. Modern anxiety is amplified by constant connectivity—news cycles, social media, and information overload keep the nervous system in threat-detection mode. Pratyahara teaches us to deliberately close off sensory input and redirect attention to internal experience. This might mean setting technology boundaries, creating calm environments, or practicing deliberate periods of sensory quietude. More profoundly, pratyahara develops the capacity to notice anxiety-triggering information without being swept into reactivity. We learn that we can choose where attention flows rather than being passively pulled by whatever captures the senses. This independence from external stimulation reduces the chronic overstimulation that maintains anxiety. Pratyahara also builds awareness of the physical and energetic sensations accompanying anxiety, creating the observational distance needed for conscious response rather than automatic reaction. It's a bridge between external management and internal mastery.
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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