The yogic practice of systematically withdrawing attention from sensory stimuli that fuel addictive cravings, treating addiction as a disorder of sensory-mental entanglement.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, teaches deliberate withdrawal of the senses from external objects. In addiction recovery, this becomes a foundational practice for interrupting the sensory-craving loop. When substance cues trigger the nervous system, pratyahara offers a method to redirect attention inward, weakening the conditioned stimulus-response pattern. Patanjali recognized that the mind follows sensory input like a chariot follows horses; addiction hijacks this natural mechanism. By practicing sense withdrawal—closing eyes during cravings, removing oneself from triggering environments, cultivating inner focus—individuals reclaim agency over their attention. This isn't suppression but conscious redirection. The practice acknowledges addiction as fundamentally a sensory-mental entanglement, where external triggers colonize internal awareness. Pratyahara provides a systematic tool for decolonizing the mind from addiction's sensory tyranny, creating space between impulse and action.
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