Withdrawal of senses from agitating inputs by balancing taste experiences, reducing mental overstimulation rooted in dietary imbalance.
Pratyahara—sense withdrawal—is yoga's fifth limb, but Ayurveda reveals that sensory agitation often begins with taste. The six tastes (sweet, sour, salty, pungent, bitter, astringent) condition the mind; excess stimulating tastes (pungent, salty) amplify Pitta reactivity and mental restlessness, while grounding tastes (sweet, salty in balance) settle Vata anxiety. True pratyahara emerges from first harmonizing the palate, which calms sensory receptors before advanced meditation. By mindfully recalibrating taste preferences—reducing overstimulation, increasing nourishing flavors—practitioners naturally withdraw from sensory chaos at its source. This makes Patanjali's inward turn practical and somatic, anchoring mental discipline in the body's actual needs rather than purely willful control.
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