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Concept
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Pratyahara: Sensory Grounding and Internal Awareness

Patanjali's fifth limb of yoga—sensory withdrawal and internal focus—parallels DBT's grounding and mindfulness skills for interrupting emotional escalation.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, involves consciously redirecting attention inward and withdrawing from reactive sensory engagement. For emotionally dysregulated clients, this practice directly supports DBT's distress tolerance skills like the TIPP technique (temperature, intense exercise, paced breathing, paired muscle relaxation) and the five senses grounding exercise. When dysregulation triggers fight-flight responses, sensory attention becomes fragmented and reactive. Pratyahara teaches intentional redirection: noticing feet on floor, breath movement, heartbeat, skin texture—activating the parasympathetic nervous system. This internal sensory focus interrupts the escalation cycle by anchoring attention to the present body rather than catastrophic thoughts. Patanjali's framework validates sensory grounding not as distraction but as legitimate attention training that strengthens emotional resilience. Clients who practice pratyahara develop a reliable tool for shifting from dysregulation's chaos into embodied presence.

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Mental Health
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