Patanjali's pratyahara (withdrawal and mastery of senses) helps trauma survivors recognize and regulate sensory triggers that activate traumatic memories during EMDR.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves conscious withdrawal and mastery over sensory input—the ability to sense what arises without being overwhelmed by it. Trauma victims often experience uncontrolled sensory reactions: a smell, sound, or physical sensation triggers the full activation of the traumatic response. EMDR work becomes more effective when combined with pratyahara training that teaches the nervous system to notice triggers with awareness rather than immediate reactivity. Patanjali taught that pratyahara is the bridge between external practice and internal mastery. In trauma processing, pratyahara allows survivors to develop conscious relationship with their senses, recognizing that sensory memories of trauma need not automatically generate emotional flooding. By cultivating pratyahara—through body awareness, grounding exercises, and EMDR's bilateral processing—survivors regain agency over their sensory experience. This creates the capacity to process trauma safely without being swept away by triggering sensations.
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