The practice of withdrawing attention from external triggers and cravings, creating psychological freedom from habitual stimuli.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, means "sense withdrawal" or "drawing inward of the senses." In behavioral terms, pratyahara is the ability to notice sensory triggers—the smell of donuts, the ping of a notification, the softness of the couch—without automatically reacting. Most habits persist because we're enslaved to sensory cues; pratyahara cultivates the capacity to perceive triggers while choosing our response. This isn't suppression or denial; it's subtle disidentification where we observe "the craving arises" rather than becoming the craving. Patanjali teaches that liberation comes through mastering the senses, not denying them. For habit change, pratyahara is the practical skill of noticing urges without surrendering to them. Modern addiction psychology calls this "urge surfing." The ancient practice reveals that behavior change fundamentally requires sensory retraining—learning to perceive habitual triggers as just sensations passing through consciousness.
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