Patanjali's fifth limb of yoga that withdraws sensory attention from external stimuli, directing awareness inward for concentrated learning.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of Patanjali's eight-fold path, describes the deliberate withdrawal of senses from external objects. This is not escapism but rather a sophisticated redirecting of perceptual capacity toward internal mental processes. In deep work contexts, pratyahara becomes the gateway state where external noise loses its grip on consciousness. Rather than fighting environmental distractions, pratyahara teaches inverting attention inward, making external stimuli irrelevant to inner focus. This principle reveals why some people can concentrate in chaos while others cannot—they've developed pratyahara naturally. For focused learning, this concept reframes the relationship with the external world: instead of demanding perfect silence, practitioners learn to internalize attention regardless of surroundings. Pratyahara transforms the learner from passive victim of environmental conditions into an active architect of internal attentional space, enabling deep work anywhere through trained sensory withdrawal.
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