Patanjali's pratyahara (sensory withdrawal and awareness) informs CBT's exposure-based techniques, where clients learn to notice and stay present with anxiety sensations rather than avoid them.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves conscious awareness and mastery of sensory experience—noticing internal sensations, emotions, and impulses without being controlled by them. This ancient practice directly parallels exposure therapy and interoceptive awareness work in CBT, particularly for anxiety, panic, and somatic symptom disorders. In exposure therapy, clients intentionally face feared situations or sensations, learning that anxiety is tolerable and diminishes with sustained attention. Pratyahara's methodology teaches similar lessons: by withdrawing habitual reactive patterns and developing mindful sensory awareness, clients discover they can observe physical sensations—racing heart, shortness of breath, tension—without catastrophizing or escaping. This shift from avoidance to awareness is transformative. A client with panic disorder learns through pratyahara-informed practice that physical sensations, while uncomfortable, are not dangerous. CBT's emphasis on staying present with uncomfortable experiences until anxiety naturally decreases mirrors pratyahara's cultivation of equanimous sensory awareness. Both traditions recognize that psychological freedom comes through conscious presence, not avoidance.
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