Pratyahara is the practice of withdrawing attention from external sensory triggers that reinforce limiting beliefs, creating inner freedom.
Pratyahara, often called sense withdrawal, is the practice of turning attention inward and releasing the grip that external stimuli have on your beliefs. Many beliefs are anchored to sensory inputs and environmental cues. A critical comment triggers the belief "I'm not good enough"; a social media comparison reinforces "Everyone else has it together"; rejection confirms "I'm unlovable." The sensory world constantly feeds and reinforces existing beliefs. Pratyahara inverts this flow. Instead of letting sensory input dictate internal experience, you consciously disengage from it. This isn't denying reality; it's choosing not to let every external stimulus reshape your inner state. Through meditation and mindful awareness, you observe: "I hear criticism; does that make it true? I see others succeeding; does that diminish my worth?" Pratyahara creates psychological sovereignty. When you're less reactive to external triggers, beliefs lose their apparent confirming evidence. This creates space for new beliefs to take root without constant environmental contradiction. Patanjali teaches pratyahara as a stage that stabilizes your inner world before deeper transformation.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.