The yoga limb of sense-withdrawal that cultivates internal awareness, providing a direct foundation for DBT's mindfulness and distress tolerance through sensory grounding techniques.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, teaches deliberate redirection of sensory attention inward, creating a bridge between external stimuli and internal response. This ancient practice anticipates modern neuroscience on emotional dysregulation: when the nervous system floods with reactivity, sensory overwhelm intensifies the cascade. Pratyahara offers a systematic method for regaining agency over attention. In DBT, techniques like the TIPP skill (Temperature, Intense exercise, Paced breathing, Paired muscle relaxation) and the five senses grounding exercise directly employ pratyahara's logic. By deliberately engaging the senses—feeling cold water, noticing textures, listening to sounds—practitioners interrupt dysregulated thought patterns and anchor awareness to the present moment. Patanjali teaches that mastery of pratyahara liberates one from compulsive reactivity to external events. For those with emotional dysregulation, this sensory awareness becomes a crucial tool: when emotions threaten to overwhelm, redirecting attention to immediate sensory experience provides both relief and reclamation of agency.
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