Pratyahara, the withdrawal of senses from external stimuli, parallels the internal focus required in EMDR to safely access and process trauma-encoded sensations and emotions.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of Patanjali's yoga, involves consciously withdrawing attention from external sensory streams to access internal experience. This precisely mirrors the EMDR environment: lights dimmed, external distractions minimized, bilateral stimulation creating internal focus. Trauma survivors typically develop hypervigilance—outward scanning for threat—as a nervous system protective strategy. Pratyahara offers a controlled, therapeutic reversal: deliberately turning attention inward while maintaining safety. During EMDR, this inward focus allows clients to access the somatic and emotional signatures of trauma—the held tension, the incomplete defensive responses, the fragmented sensory data—that cognitive awareness cannot reach. By practicing pratyahara-like sensory internalization, clients develop confidence in their internal world as a safe space for exploration. The bilateral stimulation facilitates this turning-inward while simultaneously signaling safety to the nervous system. This integration of pratyahara principles within EMDR creates optimal conditions for memory reconsolidation, as trauma material becomes consciously accessible and processable from a grounded internal state.
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