Patanjali's stage of sense withdrawal teaches intentional attention control, reducing anxiety through grounded sensory focus rather than thought spirals.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves withdrawing attention from external stimuli and reactive patterns, then consciously directing awareness toward chosen objects. Rather than "running away," pratyahara teaches selective attention: deliberately choosing what to focus on. In CBT for anxiety, this becomes a powerful intervention tool. During panic or rumination, the nervous system escalates when attention fixates on threat cues or catastrophic thoughts. Pratyahara-informed practice teaches clients to recognize when attention has been captured by anxiety and to intentionally redirect it toward grounding sensations: breath, physical contact, environmental details. This aligns with CBT's grounding techniques and mindfulness-based interventions, which interrupt the anxiety loop by anchoring attention in present-moment sensory experience. Patanjali's framework reveals that anxiety often results from uncontrolled sensory and mental input; pratyahara restores agency over attention. Clients practicing this skill develop the metacognitive ability to notice, "My mind is spiraling; I'm choosing to ground in my breath," transforming from passive anxiety victims into active directors of their own attention and nervous system state.
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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