The practice of consciously withdrawing awareness from external stimuli to recalibrate an over-vigilant nervous system and restore capacity for safe perception.
Pratyahara, the fifth limb, is the deliberate inward turning of the senses—creating a buffer between overwhelming external stimuli and an already dysregulated nervous system. C-PTSD survivors often exist in a state of hypervigilance, scanning the environment for threats and exhausting their capacity for presence. Pratyahara offers a technique: systematically withdrawing attention from each sense (sight, sound, touch, taste, smell) and returning to internal awareness. This practice is not dissociation but conscious choice—the survivor learns to close sensory gates when flooded, protecting their nervous system from additional trauma input. Over time, pratyahara rebuilds the capacity to discern safe from unsafe stimuli, weakening the amygdala's hair-trigger response. It is a foundational practice before deeper meditation, serving as a grounding technique during flashbacks or panic. For C-PTSD, pratyahara becomes a portable sanctuary, a way to reclaim agency over what reaches consciousness and restore the nervous system's capacity to distinguish signal from noise.
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