The withdrawal of sensory attention as a tool for managing personality-driven preferences and impulses, particularly for extraverted or sensation-seeking types.
Pratyahara—the conscious withdrawal of sensory attention inward—is Patanjali's fifth limb, essential for mental mastery. This addresses a core personality challenge: sensation-seeking types (high Openness, ESFP, Type 7) often become enslaved to external stimuli, while withdrawn types (high Introversion, INTJ, Type 5) retreat into inner worlds. Pratyahara offers a middle path: conscious control over where attention flows. Rather than reflexively pursuing external stimulation or avoiding it, practitioners develop the capacity to engage or withdraw sensory focus intentionally. For extraverts, pratyahara prevents compulsive external seeking; for introverts, it prevents avoidant withdrawal. This practice reveals that personality types describe habitual attention patterns, not immutable orientations. By training sensory attention through meditation and deliberate practice, individuals transcend their type's natural preferences, becoming capable of flexible engagement with both inner and outer worlds. This is particularly liberating for understanding MBTI's E-I preference as trainable rather than fixed.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.