Pratyahara—withdrawal of senses inward—is the essential skill for developing internal awareness and direct contact with parts outside the body's reactivity.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, teaches the withdrawal and redirection of sensory attention inward. This is not dissociation but conscious internalization—turning the mind's spotlight away from external stimuli and toward inner experience. For parts work practitioners, pratyahara is foundational: you cannot dialogue with your parts while fully captured by external demands and sensory input. Patanjali recognized that most human suffering emerges from automatic reactivity to external triggers; pratyahara creates the space between stimulus and response. In IFS, this space is where Self-leadership becomes possible. When a part is triggered, pratyahara allows you to notice the activation, locate it somatically, and observe it rather than act from it. The practice of consciously directing attention inward—away from the phone, the task list, the other person—creates the sanctuary where genuine parts dialogue can occur. Pratyahara builds the inner listening capacity that makes all deeper transformation possible.
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