Periagoge
Concept
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Pratyahara: Sensory Withdrawal and Emotional Reactivity

The practice of withdrawing attention from external sensory triggers to interrupt automatic emotional reactions at their source.

Patan
Why It Matters

Pratyahara, the fifth limb of yoga, teaches withdrawal of the senses from external stimuli, which is essential for emotional regulation. Emotional reactivity often begins when sensory input automatically captures attention and triggers habitual responses. External stimuli—provocative news, critical comments, challenging situations—activate conditioned emotional patterns before conscious awareness can intervene. Pratyahara cultivates the capacity to modulate sensory input, choosing where attention flows rather than being hijacked by stimuli. This does not mean avoidance but conscious disengagement. Through practices like visualization and breathwork, practitioners learn to redirect attention inward, creating a buffer between stimulus and response. In daily life, this translates to pausing before reacting, checking email less compulsively, or limiting exposure to triggering content during vulnerable moments. This framework recognizes that emotion regulation begins with managing what we allow to capture our attention.

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