Periagoge
Concept
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Pratyahara: Sensory Withdrawal and Safety

The yogic technique of conscious sensory withdrawal helps C-PTSD sufferers regulate hypervigilance and create internal refuge from overwhelming external triggers.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, teaches deliberate withdrawal of sensory attention inward—a practice profoundly healing for those with complex trauma whose nervous systems remain on constant external alert. C-PTSD survivors typically experience hypervigilance: scanning environments for danger, reacting to subtle cues others miss. Pratyahara offers a counterbalance by intentionally turning attention away from sensory input and toward internal experience. This isn't dissociation but conscious choice: the practitioner systematically releases focus from sounds, sights, physical sensations, redirecting awareness to breath, inner space, felt safety. For trauma survivors, this reclaims agency over attention itself. Rather than being hijacked by environmental triggers, they practice deliberately choosing where awareness lands. This builds a stable internal sanctuary—essential for those whose external world triggered profound violation. Regular pratyahara practice gradually resets the threat-detection system, reducing the constant vigilance that exhausts complex trauma survivors.

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